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WORKERS OF ALL COUNTRIES, UNITE! 



PUBLISHER'S NOTE 

This translation of J. V. Stalin's Works 
has been made from the text of the Russian 
edition prepared by the Marx-Engels-Lenin 
Institute of the Central Committee, C.P.S.U. 
Some of J. V. Stalin's works given in Vol- 
umes 1 and 2 of the Russian edition of the 
Works are translations from the Georgian. 
This is indicated at the end of each of the 
works concerned. 



From Marx to Mao 



© Digital Reprints 
2006 



Russian Edition 

Published by Decision 

OF THE Central Committee 

OF THE Communist Party 

OF THE Soviet Union 

(Bolsheviks) 



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J. Y STALIN 



WORKS 

VOLUME 
^ 1 

i90i"1907 



FOREIGN LANGUAGES PUBLISHING HOUSE 
Moscow • 1954 




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CONTENTS 



Page 

Preface to this Edition XI 

Preface to Volume One XV 

Author 's Preface to Volume One XVII 

NOT 

1901-07 

FROM THE EDITORS 1 

THE RUSSIAN SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC PARTY AND ITS 

IMMEDIATE TASKS 9 

THE SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC VIEW OF THE NATIONAL 

QUESTION 31 

A LETTER FROM KUTAIS 55 

A LETTER FROM KUTAIS {From the Same Comrade) . . 59 

THE PROLETARIAN CLASS AND THE PROLETARIAN 

PARTY (Concerning Paragraph One of the Party Rules) 63 

WORKERS OF THE CAUCASUS, IT IS TIME TO TAKE 

REVENGE! 75 

LONG LIVE INTERNATIONAL FRATERNITY! ... 82 

TO CITIZENS. LONG LIVE THE RED FLAG! .... 85 



VIII CONTENTS 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE 

PARTY 90 

ARMED INSURRECTION AND OUR TACTICS . . 133 

THE PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY GOVERNMENT 

AND SOCIAL-DEMOCRACY 140 

A REPLY TO SOCIAL-DEMOCRAT 162 

REACTION IS GROWING 175 

THE BOURGEOISIE IS LAYING A TRAP 181 

CITIZENS! 187 

TO ALL THE WORKERS 191 

TIFLIS, NOVEMBER 20, 1905 195 

TWO CLASHES (CoHcerHwg yaraary 9) 198 

THE STATE DUMA AND THE TACTICS OF SOCIAL- 
DEMOCRACY 207 

THE AGRARIAN QUESTION 216 

CONCERNING THE AGRARIAN QUESTION .... 232 

CONCERNING THE REVISION OF THE AGRARIAN 
PROGRAMME {Speech Delivered at the Seventh Sitting 
of the Fourth Congress of the R.S.D.L.P., April 13 

(26), 1906) 238 

ON THE PRESENT SITUATION {Speech Delivered at the 
Fifteenth Sitting of the Fourth Congress of the R.S.D.L.P., 

April 17 (30), 1906) 241 

MARX AND ENGELS ON INSURRECTION 243 

INTERNATIONAL COUNTER-REVOLUTION .... 249 

THE PRESENT SITUATION AND THE UNITY CONGRESS 

OF THE WORKERS' PARTY 252 

THE CLASS STRUGGLE 280 



CONTENTS IX 



"FACTORY LEGISLATION" AND THE PROLETARIAN 

STRUGGLE (Concerning the Two Laws of November 15) 289 

ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM? 297 

I The Dialectical Method 300 

II The Materialist Theory 313 

III Proletarian Socialism 331 

Appendix 373 

Anarchism or Socialis m? — 

Dialectical Materialism — 

Notes 392 

Biographical Chronicle (1879-1906) 415 



PREFACE 



The present collection of the works of J. V. Stalin 
is published by decision of the Central Committee of 
the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Bolsheviks). 

Hitherto only part of Comrade Stalin's works has been 
published in separate collections. His articles and speeches 
of the period immediately before October 1917 were collect- 
ed in the book On the Road to October, which appeared 
in two editions in 1925. In 1932 the collection The Octo- 
ber Revolution was published, containing articles and 
speeches on the Great October Socialist Revolution. 
Works on the national question went into the collection 
Marxism and the National and Colonial Question, which 
has appeared in several editions. The articles and 
speeches of 1921-1927, dealing mainly with internal Party 
questions and the rout of the opposition groups that 
were hostile to the Party, constituted a separate col- 
lection entitled On the Opposition, which was published 
in 1928. In addition, there are other collections in which 
are compiled J. V. Stalin's articles and speeches on 
definite subjects, such as, for example, the collections: 
On Lenin, Articles and Speeches on the Ukraine, The 
Peasant Question, The Young Communist League, and 
others. 



XII PREFACE TO THIS EDITION 

At different times several collections were published 
containing works by both V. I. Lenin and J. V. Stalin, 
such as, 1917 — Selected Writings and Speeches, The 
Defence of the Socialist Motherland, A Collection of Works 
for the Study of the History of the C.P.S.U.(B.). in three 
volumes, Lenin-Stalin — selected works in one volume. 
On Party Affairs, On Socialist Emulation, On Labour, 
and others. 

The most widely distributed collection of the works 
of Comrade Stalin up to this point has been the book 
Problems of Leninism, which has gone through eleven 
editions. With every new edition the contents of this 
book underwent considerable change: nearly every edi- 
tion included new works and, at the same time, in order 
to keep the book to its previous size, the author deleted 
certain works from it. Comrade Stalin's speeches, re- 
ports and Orders of the Day delivered during the Patriotic 
War the Soviet people waged against the German fascist 
invaders are collected in the book On the Great Patriotic 
War of the Soviet Union, which has gone through five 
editions. 

However, a large number of J. V. Stalin's works, writ- 
ten before and after the October Revolution, were not 
reprinted and, hitherto, not collected after their pub- 
lication in newspapers and magazines. Moreover, there 
are articles and letters by Comrade Stalin which have 
not been published before. 

This is a first attempt to collect and publish in one 
edition nearly all the works of J. V. Stalin. 

Volume 1 contains the works of J. V. Stalin written 
from 1901 to April 1907. 

Volume 2 includes works written from 1907 to 1913. 



PREFACE TO THIS EDITION XIII 

Volume 3 consists of works of the period of prepara- 
tion for the Great October Socialist Revolution (March- 
October 1917). These are mainly articles that were pub- 
lished in Pravda. 

Volume 4 (November 1917-1920) includes works writ- 
ten in the first months of the existence of the Soviet 
government and in the period of foreign military inter- 
vention and civil war. 

The next three Volumes — 5, 6 and 7 — contain works 
of the period of the Soviet state's transition to the 
peaceful work of rehabilitating the national economy 
(1921-1925). Volume 5 contains works written from 1921 
up to the death of V. I. Lenin (January 1924). Volume 6 
includes works of 1924. Volume 7 contains works written 
in 1925. 

J. V. Stalin's works of the period of the struggle 
for the socialist industrialisation of the country 
(1926-1929) constitute Volumes 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12. 
Volumes 8 and 9 contain articles, speeches, reports, 
etc., made during 1926; Volumes 10 and 11, those 
of 1927; and Volume 12, those of the period of 
1928-1929. 

Volume 13 contains works of the period 1930-1933, 
dealing mainly with questions concerning the collec- 
tivisation of agriculture and the further development of 
socialist industrialisation. 

Volume 14 contains works covering the period 1934- 
1940, dealing with the struggle to complete the building of 
socialism in the U.S.S.R., with the creation of the new 
Constitution of the Soviet Union, and with the struggle 
for peace in the situation prevailing at the opening of 
the Second World War. 



XIV PREFACE TO THIS EDITION 

Volume 15 consists of J. V. Stalin's work, History 
of the C.P.S.U.(B.), Short Course, which appeared in 
a separate edition in 1938. 

Volume 16 contains works of the period of the Soviet 
Union's Great Patriotic War, including J. V. Stalin's 
reports, speeches, and Orders of the Day on the anniver- 
saries of the Great October Socialist Revolution, addresses 
to the people in connection with the rout and surrender 
of Germany and Japan, and other documents. 

All the works in the respective volumes are arranged 
in chronological order according to the time at which they 
were written or published. Each volume is furnished with 
a preface, brief explanatory notes, and a biographical 
chronicle. Dates until the adoption of the New Style 
calendar (up to February 14, 1918) are given in Old 
Style; those after that are given in New Style. 

The texts of Comrade Stalin's works are given in 
their original form except in a few instances where the 
author has introduced slight changes of a purely 
stylistic character. 

Marx-Engels-Lenin Institute 
of the C.P., C.P.S.U.(B.) 



PREFACE TO VOLUME ONE 



Volume 1 includes the works of J. V. Stalin written 
from 1901 to April 1907, the period when he conducted 
his revolutionary activities mainly in Tiflis. 

In this period the Bolsheviks, under the leadership 
of V. I. Lenin, were laying the foundations of the Marxist- 
Leninist Party, of its ideology and principles of organ- 
isation. 

In this period Comrade Stalin, combating various 
anti-Marxist and opportunist trends, created Leninist- 
Iskra Bolshevik organisations in Transcaucasia and 
directed their activities. In his works he substantiated 
and vindicated the fundamental principles of the Marxist- 
Leninist doctrine. 

Only a small part of J. V. Stalin's works included 
in Volume 1 were published in Russian. Most of them 
were published in Georgian newspapers and pamphlets. 
The majority of these appear in Russian for the first 
time. 

The archives of the Caucasian Union Committee of 
the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party, and some of 
the publications issued by the Transcaucasian Bolshevik 



XVI PREFACE TO VOLUME ONE 

organisations, in which works of J. V. Stalin were pub- 
lished, have not been found to this day. In particular, 
the Programme of Studies for Marxist Workers ' Circles 
(1898) and Credo (1904) are still missing. 

Volume 1 of the present edition does not con- 
tain all the works of J. V. Stalin written from 1901 to 
April 1907. 

Marx-Engels-Lenin Institute 
of the C.C., C.P.S.U.(B.) 



AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO VOLUME ONE 



The works comprising Volume 1 were written in the 
early period of the author's activities (1901-1907), when 
the elaboration of the ideology and policy of Leninism 
was not yet completed. This partly applies also to Vol- 
ume 2 of the Works. 

To understand and properly appraise these works, 
they must be regarded as the works of a young Marxist 
not yet moulded into a finished Marxist-Leninist. It 
is natural therefore that these works should bear traces 
of some of the propositions of the old Marxists which 
afterwards became obsolete and were subsequently dis- 
carded by our Party. I have in mind two questions: 
the question of the agrarian programme, and the question 
of the conditions for the victory of the socialist revo- 
lution. 

As is evident from Volume 1 (see articles "The 
Agrarian Question"), at that time the author main- 
tained that the landlords' lands should be distributed 
among the peasants as the peasants' private property. 
At the Party's Unity Congress, at which the agrarian 
question was discussed, the majority of the Bolshevik 
delegates engaged in practical Party work supported 
the distribution point of view, the majority of the 



XVIII AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO VOLUME ONE 

Mensheviks stood for municipalisation, Lenin and the rest 
of the Bolshevik delegates stood for the nationalisation 
of the land. In the course of the controversy around these 
three drafts, when it became evident that the prospect 
of the congress accepting the draft on nationalisation 
was hopeless, Lenin and the other nationalisers at the 
congress voted with the distributors. 

The distributors advanced three arguments against 
nationalisation: a) that the peasants would not accept 
the nationalisation of the landlords' lands, because they 
wanted to obtain those lands as their private property; 
b) that the peasants would resist nationalisation, be- 
cause they would regard it as a measure to abolish the 
private ownership of the land which they already pri- 
vately owned; c) that even if the peasants' objection to 
nationalisation could be overcome, we Marxists should 
not advocate nationalisation, because, after the victory 
of the bourgeois-democratic revolution, the state in 
Russia would not be a socialist, but a bourgeois state, 
and the possession by the bourgeois state of a large fund 
of nationalised land would inordinately strengthen the 
bourgeoisie to the detriment of the interests of the pro- 
letariat. 

In this the distributors proceeded from the premise 
that was accepted among Russian Marxists, including 
the Bolsheviks, that after the victory of the bourgeois- 
democratic revolution there would be a more or less 
long interruption in the revolution, that between the 
victorious bourgeois revolution and the future socialist 
revolution there would be an interval, during which 
capitalism would have the opportunity to develop more 
freely and powerfully and embrace agriculture too; that 



AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO VOLUME ONE XIX 

the class struggle would become more intense and more 
widespread, the proletariat's class would grow in numbers, 
the proletariat's class consciousness and organisa- 
tion would rise to the proper level, and that only after 
all this could the period of the socialist revolution 
set in. 

It must be observed that the premise that a long 
interval would set in between the two revolutions was 
not opposed by anybody at the congress; both the advo- 
cates of nationalisation and distribution on the one 
hand, and the advocates of municipalisation on the other, 
were of the opinion that the agrarian programme of Rus- 
sian Social-Democracy should facilitate the further and 
more powerful development of capitalism in Russia. 

Did we Bolshevik practical workers know that Lenin 
at that time held the view that the bourgeois revolution 
in Russia would grow into the socialist revolution, that 
he held the view of uninterrupted revolution? Yes, we 
did. We knew it from his pamphlet entitled Two Tactics 
(1905), and also from his celebrated article "The Attitude 
of Social-Democracy Towards the Peasant Movement" 
of 1905, in which he stated that "we stand for uninter- 
rupted revolution" and that "we shall not stop halfway." 
But because of our inadequate theoretical training, 
and because of our neglect, characteristic of practical 
workers, of theoretical questions, we had not studied 
the question thoroughly enough and had failed to under- 
stand its great significance. As we know, for some 
reason Lenin did not at that time develop the arguments 
following from the theory of the growing over of the 
bourgeois revolution into the socialist revolution, nor did 
he use them at the congress in support of nationalisation. 



XX AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO VOLUME ONE 

Was it not because he believed that the question 
was not yet ripe, and because he did not expect the 
majority of the Bolshevik practical workers at the con- 
gress to be sufficiently equipped to understand and accept 
the theory that the bourgeois revolution must grow into 
the socialist revolution that he refrained from advancing 
these arguments? 

It was only some time later, when Lenin's theory 
that the bourgeois revolution in Russia must grow into 
the socialist revolution became the guiding line of the 
Bolshevik Party, that disagreements on the agrarian 
question vanished in the Party; for it became evident 
that in a country like Russia — where the specific condi- 
tions of development had prepared the ground for the 
growth of the bourgeois revolution into the socialist 
revolution — the Marxist party could have no other 
agrarian programme than that of land nationalisation. 

The second question concerns the problem of the 
victory of the socialist revolution. As is evident from 
Volume 1 (see articles Anarchism or Socialism?), at 
that time the author adhered to the thesis, current among 
Marxists, that one of the major conditions for the victory 
of the socialist revolution is that the proletariat must 
become the majority of the population, that, conse- 
quently, in those countries where the proletariat does 
not yet constitute the majority of the population owing 
to the inadequate development of capitalism, the victory 
of socialism is impossible. 

This thesis was taken as generally accepted among 
Russian Marxists, including the Bolsheviks, as well as 
among the Social-Democratic parties of other countries. 
The subsequent development of capitalism in Europe 



AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO VOLUME ONE XXI 

and America, however, the transition from pre-impe- 
rialist capitalism to imperialist capitalism and, finally, 
Lenin's discovery of the law of the uneven economic 
and political development of different countries, showed 
that this thesis no longer corresponded to the new con- 
ditions of development, that the victory of socialism 
was quite possible in individual countries where capi- 
talism had not yet reached the highest point of develop- 
ment and the proletariat did not yet constitute the major- 
ity of the population, but where the capitalist front 
was sufficiently weak to be breached by the proletariat. 
Lenin's theory of the socialist revolution thus arose in 
1915-1916. As is well known, Lenin's theory of the social- 
ist revolution proceeds from the thesis that the socialist 
revolution will be victorious not necessarily in those 
countries where capitalism is most developed, but pri- 
marily in those countries where the capitalist front is 
weak, where it is easier for the proletariat to breach 
that front, where capitalism has reached, say, only the 
medium stage of development. 

This is all the comment the author wishes to make 
on the works collected in Volume 1. 

/. Stalin 

January 1946 



i90i^i907 



FROM THE EDITORS* 



Convinced that for intelligent Georgian readers the 
publication of a free periodical is an urgent question; 
convinced that this question must be settled today and 
that further delay can only damage the common cause; 
convinced that every intelligent reader will welcome such 
a publication and will render it every assistance, we, a 
group of Georgian revolutionary Social-Democrats, are 
meeting this want in the endeavour to satisfy the readers' 
wishes as far as it lies in our power. We are issuing the 
first number of the first Georgian free newspaper Brdzola. ' 

To enable the reader to form a definite opinion about 
our publication and, in particular, about ourselves, we 
shall say a few words. 

The Social-Democratic movement has not left un- 
touched a single corner of the country. It has not avoided 
that corner of Russia which we call the Caucasus, and 
with the Caucasus, it has not avoided our Georgia. The 
Social-Democratic movement in Georgia is a recent 
phenomenon, it is only a few years old; to be more pre- 
cise, the foundations of that movement were laid only 



* Leading article in the illegal Social-Democratic newspaper 
Brdzola {The Struggle). 



J. V. STALIN 



in 1896. Here, as everywhere else, our activities at first 
did not extend beyond the bounds of secrecy. Agitation 
and wide propaganda in the form that we have been 
witnessing lately were impossible and, willy-nilly, all 
efforts were concentrated in a few circles. This period 
has now passed. Social-Democratic ideas have spread 
among the masses of the workers, and activities have 
also overflowed the narrow bounds of secrecy and have 
spread to a large section of the workers. The open struggle 
has started. This struggle has confronted the pioneer 
Party workers with many questions of a kind that have 
been in the background hitherto and have not urgently 
called for explanation. The first question that has arisen 
in all its magnitude is: what means have we at our com- 
mand to enlarge the area of the struggle? In words, the 
answer to this question is very simple and easy; in prac- 
tice it is quite different. 

It goes without saying that for the organised 
Social-Democratic movement the principal means is the 
extensive propaganda of and agitation for revolutionary 
ideas. But the conditions under which the revolution- 
ary is obliged to operate are so contradictory, so diffi- 
cult, and call for such heavy sacrifices, that often both 
propaganda and agitation become impossible in the 
form that the initial stage of the movement requires. 
Studying in circles with the a id of books and pamphlets 
becomes impossible, first, because of police persecution, 
and secondly, because of the very way this work is 
organised. Agitation wanes with the very first arrests. It 
becomes impossible to maintain contact with the workers 
and to visit them often; and yet the workers are expecting 
explanations of numerous questions of the day. A fierce 



FROM THE EDITORS 



struggle is raging around them; all the forces of the 
government are mustered against them; but they have 
no means of critically analysing the present situation, 
they have no information about the actual state of 
affairs, and often a slight setback at some neighbour- 
ing factory is enough to cause revolutionary-minded 
workers to cool off, to lose confidence in the future, and 
the leader is obliged to start drawing them into the work 
anew. 

In most cases, agitation with the aid of pamphlets 
which provide answers only to certain definite questions 
has little effect. It becomes necessary to create a litera- 
ture that provides answers to questions of the day. We 
shall not stop to prove this commonly-known truth. In 
the Georgian labour movement the time has already 
arrived when a periodical becomes one of the principal 
means of revolutionary activity. 

For the information of some of our uninitiated readers 
we deem it necessary to say a few words about the le- 
gally printed newspapers. We would deem it a great 
mistake if any worker regarded such a newspaper, irre- 
spective of the conditions under which it was published 
or of the trend it pursued, as the mouthpiece of his, the 
worker's, interests. The government, which "takes care" 
of the workers, is in a splendid position as far as such 
newspapers are concerned. A whole horde of officials, 
called censors, are attached to them, and it is their 
special function to watch them and to resort to red ink 
and scissors if even a single ray of truth breaks through. 
Circular after circular comes flying to the committee 
of censors ordering: "Don't pass anything concerning 
the workers; don't publish anything about this or that 



J. V. STALIN 



event; don't permit the discussion of such and such a 
subject," and so on and so forth. Under these conditions, 
it is, of course, impossible for a newspaper to be run 
properly; and in vain will the worker seek in its columns, 
even between the lines, for information on and a correct 
appraisal of matters that concern him. If anybody were 
to believe that a worker can gain any benefit from the 
rare lines that appear in this or that legally printed 
newspaper casually mentioning matters concerning him, 
and let through by the butchering censors only by mis- 
take, we would have to say that he who placed his hopes 
on such fragments and attempted to build up a system 
of propaganda on such snippets would display lack of 
understanding. 

We repeat that we are saying this only for the in- 
formation of a few uninitiated readers. 

And so, a Georgian free periodical is something the 
Social-Democratic movement needs very urgently. The 
only question now is how to run such a publication; 
by what should it be guided, and what should it give the 
Georgian Social-Democrats. 

From the point of view of the onlooker, the question 
of the existence of a Georgian newspaper in general, and 
the question of its content and trend in particular, 
may seem to settle themselves naturally and simply: 
the Georgian Social-Democratic movement is not a sepa- 
rate, exclusively Georgian, working-class movement with 
its own separate programme; it goes hand in hand 
with the entire Russian movement and, consequently, 
accepts the authority of the Russian Social-Democratic 
Party — hence it is clear that a Georgian Social-Democratic 
newspaper should be only a local organ that deals mainly 



FROM THE EDITORS 



with local questions and reflects the local movement. 
But behind this reply lurks a difficulty which we 
cannot ignore and which we shall inevitably encounter. 
We refer to the language difficulty. While the Cen- 
tral Committee of the Russian Social-Democratic Party 
is able to explain all general questions with the aid 
of the all-Party newspaper and leave it to the regional 
committees to deal only with local questions, the Geor- 
gian newspaper finds itself in a difficulty as regards 
content. The Georgian newspaper must simultaneously 
play the part of an all-Party and of a regional, or local 
organ. As the majority of Georgian working-class readers 
cannot freely read the Russian newspaper, the editors 
of the Georgian newspaper have no right to pass over 
those questions which the all-Party Russian newspaper 
is discussing, and should discuss. Thus, the Georgian 
newspaper must inform its readers about all questions 
of principle concerning theory and tactics. At the same 
time it must lead the local movement and throw proper 
light on every event, without leaving a single fact unex- 
plained, and providing answers to all questions that 
excite the local workers. The Georgian newspaper must 
link up and unite the Georgian and Russian militant 
workers The newspaper must inform its readers about 
everything that interests them at home, in Russia and 
abroad. 

Such, in general, is our view of what the Georgian 
newspaper should be. 

A few words about the content and trend of the 
newspaper. 

We must demand that as a Social-Democratic news- 
paper it should devote attention mainly to the militants 



J. V. STALIN 



workers. We think it superfluous to say that in Russia, 
and everywhere, the revolutionary proletariat alone is 
destined by history to liberate mankind and bring the 
world happiness. Clearly, only the working-class move- 
ment stands on solid ground, and it alone is free from 
all sorts of Utopian fairy tales. Consequently, the news- 
paper, as the organ of the Social-Democrats, should lead 
the working-class movement, point the road for it, 
and safeguard it from error. In short, the primary duty 
of the newspaper is to be as close to the masses of the 
workers as possible, to be able constantly to influence 
them and serve as their conscious and guiding centre. 

As, however, in the conditions prevailing in Russia 
today, it is possible that other elements of society besides 
the workers may come out as the champions of "freedom," 
and as this freedom is the immediate goal of the militant 
workers of Russia, it is the duty of the newspaper to 
afford space for every revolutionary movement, even one 
outside the labour movement. We say "afford space" 
not only for casual information, or simply news. No! 
The newspaper must devote special attention to the 
revolutionary movement that goes on, or will arise, 
among other elements of society. It must explain every 
social phenomenon and thereby influence every one who 
is fighting for freedom. Hence, the newspaper must 
devote special attention to the political situation in 
Russia, weigh up all the consequences of this situation, 
and on the widest possible basis raise the question of the 
necessity of waging a political struggle. 

We are convinced that nobody will quote our words 
as proof that we advocate establishing connection and 
compromising with the bourgeoisie. The proper appraisal. 



FROM THE EDITORS 



the exposure of the weaknesses and errors of the movement 
against the existing system, even if it proceeds among 
the bourgeoisie, cannot cast the stain of opportunism 
on the Social-Democrats. The only thing here is not to 
forget Social-Democratic principles and revolutionary 
methods of fighting. If we measure every movement 
with this yardstick, we shall keep free of all Bernsteinian 
delusions. 

Thus, the Georgian Social-Democratic newspaper must 
provide plain answers to all questions connected with the 
working-class movement, explain questions of principle, 
explain theoretically the role the working class plays 
in the struggle, and throw the light of scientific social- 
ism upon every phenomenon the workers encounter. 

At the same time, the newspaper must serve as the 
representative of the Russian Social-Democratic Party 
and give its readers timely information about all the 
views on tactics held by Russian revolutionary Social- 
Democracy. It must inform its readers about how the 
workers in other countries live, what they are doing to 
improve their conditions, and how they are doing it, 
and issue a timely call to the Georgian workers to enter 
the battle-field. At the same time, the newspaper must 
not leave out of account, and without Social-Democratic 
criticism, a single social movement. 

Such is our view of what a Georgian newspaper 
should be. 

We cannot deceive either ourselves or our readers 
by promising to carry out these tasks in their entirety 
with the forces at present at our command. To run the 
newspaper as it really ought to be run we need the aid of 
our readers and sympathisers. The reader will note that 



J. V. STALIN 



the first number oi Brdzola suffers from numerous defects, 
but defects which can be rectified, if only our readers 
give us their assistance. In particular, we emphasise 
the paucity of home news. Being at a distance from home 
we are unable to watch the revolutionary movement in 
Georgia and provide timely information and explanation 
concerning questions of that movement. Hence we must 
receive assistance from Georgia. Whoever wishes to assist 
us also with literary contributions will undoubtedly 
find means of establishing direct or indirect contact 
with the editors of Brdzola. 

We call upon all Georgian militant Social-Democrats 
to take a keen interest in the fate of Brdzola, to render 
every assistance in publishing and distributing it, and 
thereby convert the first free Georgian newspaper Brdzola 
into a weapon of the revolutionary struggle. 

Brdzola {The Struggle), No. 1, 
September 1901 

Unsigned 

Translated from the Georgian 



THE RUSSIAN SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC PARTY 
AND ITS IMMEDIATE TASKS 



Human thought was obliged to undergo considerable 
trial, suffering and change before it reached scientifically 
elaborated and substantiated socialism. West-European 
Socialists were obliged for a long time to wander blind- 
ly in the wilderness of Utopian (impossible, impracti- 
cable) socialism before they hewed a path for themselves, 
investigated and established the laws of social life, and 
hence, mankind's need for socialism. Since the beginning 
of the last century Europe has produced numerous brave, 
self-sacrificing and honest scientific workers who tried 
to explain and decide the question as to what can rid 
mankind of the ills which are becoming increasingly 
intense and acute with the development of trade and in- 
dustry. Many storms, many torrents of blood swept over 
Western Europe in the struggle to end the oppression 
of the majority by the minority, but sorrow remained 
undispelled, wounds remained unhealed, and pain became 
more and more unendurable with every passing day. We 
must regard as one of the principal reasons for this the 
fact that Utopian socialism did not investigate the laws 
of social life; it soared higher and higher above life. 



10 J. V. S TALI N 



whereas what was needed was firm contact with reality. 
The Utopians set out to achieve socialism as an immediate 
object at a time when the ground for it was totally un- 
prepared in real life — and what was more deplorable 
because of its results — the Utopians expected that so- 
cialism would be brought into being by the powerful 
of this world who, they believed, could easily be con- 
vinced of the correctness of the socialist ideal (Robert 
Owen, Louis Blanc, Fourier and others). This outlook 
completely obscured from view the real labour move- 
ment and the masses of the workers, the only natural 
vehicle of the socialist ideal. The Utopians could not 
understand this. They wanted to establish happiness 
on earth by legislation, by declarations, without the 
assistance of the people (the workers). They paid no 
particular attention to the labour movement and often 
even denied its importance. As a consequence, their 
theories remained mere theories which failed to affect 
the masses of the workers, among whom, quite inde- 
pendently of these theories, matured the great idea pro- 
claimed in the middle of the last century by that genius, 
Karl Marx: ""The emancipation of the working class must 
be the act of the working class itself . . . Workingmen 
of all countries, uniteT 

These words brought out the truth, now evident even 
to the "blind," that what was needed to bring about the 
socialist ideal was the independent action of the workers 
and their amalgamation into an organised force, irrespec- 
tive of nationality and country. It was necessary to es- 
tablish this truth — and this was magnificently performed 
by Marx and his friend Engels — in order to lay firm 
foundations for the mighty Social-Democratic Party, 



THE R.S.D.L.P. AND ITS IMMEDIATE TASKS H 

which today towers like inexorable fate over the European 
bourgeois system, threatening its destruction and the 
erection on its ruins of a socialist system. 

In Russia the evolution of the idea of socialism fol- 
lowed almost the same path as that in Western Europe. 
In Russia, too. Socialists were obliged for a long time to 
wander blindly before they reached Social-Democratic 
consciousness — scientific socialism. Here, too, there 
were Socialists and there was a labour movement, but 
they marched independently of each other, going sepa- 
rate ways: the Socialists towards Utopian dreams (Zemlya 
i Volya, Narodnaya Volya*), and the labour movement 
towards spontaneous revolts. Both operated in the same 
period -(seventies-eighties) ignorant of each other. The 
Socialists had no roots among the working population 
and, consequently, their activities were abstract, futile. 
The workers, on the other hand, lacked leaders, organisers, 
and, consequently, their movement took the form of dis- 
orderly revolts. This was the main reason why the heroic 
struggle that the Socialists waged for socialism remained 
fruitless, and why their legendary courage was shat- 
tered against the solid wall of autocracy. The Russian So- 
cialists established contact with the masses of the workers 
only at the beginning of the nineties. They realised 
that salvation lay only in the working class, and that 
this class alone would bring about the socialist ideal. 
Russian Social-Democracy now concentrated all its ef- 
forts and attention upon the movement that was going 
on among the Russian workers at that time. Still 



* Zemlya i Volya — Land and Freedom; Narodnaya Volya- 
People's Will.— 7r. 



12 J. V. S TALI N 



inadequately class conscious, and ill-equipped for the 
struggle, the Russian workers tried gradually to extri- 
cate themselves from their hopeless position and to 
improve their lot somehow. There was no systematic 
organisational work in that movement at the time, of 
course; the movement was a spontaneous one. 

And so, Social-Democracy set to work upon this 
unconscious, spontaneous and unorganised movement. 
It tried to develop the class consciousness of the workers, 
tried to unite the isolated and sporadic struggles of indi- 
vidual groups of workers against individual masters, 
to combine them in a common class struggle, in order 
that it might become the struggle of the Russian work- 
ing class against the oppressing class of Russia; and it 
tried to give this struggle an organised character. 

In the initial stages, Social-Democracy was unable 
to spread its activities among the masses of the workers 
and it, therefore, confined its activities to propaganda 
and agitation circles. The only form of activity it 
engaged in at that time was to conduct study circles. 
The object of these circles was to create among the 
workers themselves a group that would subsequently 
be able to lead the movement. Therefore, these circles 
were made up of advanced workers — only chosen workers 
could attend them. 

But soon the study-circle period passed away. 
Social-Democracy soon felt the necessity of leaving the 
narrow confines of the circles and of spreading its in- 
fluence among the broad masses of the workers. This 
was facilitated by external conditions. At that time the 
spontaneous movement among the workers rose to an 
exceptional height. Who of you does not remember the 



THE R.S.D.L.P. AND ITS IMMEDIATE TASKS 13 

year when nearly the whole of Tiflis was involved in 
this spontaneous movement? Unorganised strikes at the 
tobacco factories and in the railway workshops followed 
one after another. Here, it happened in 1897-98; in Russia 
it happened somewhat earlier. Timely assistance was 
needed, and Social-Democracy hastened to render that 
assistance. A struggle started for a shorter working day, 
for the abolition of fines, for higher wages, and so forth. 
Social-Democracy well knew that the development of 
the labour movement could not be restricted to these 
petty demands, that these demands were not the goal 
of the movement, but only a means of achieving the goal. 
Even if these demands were petty, even if the workers 
themselves in individual towns and districts were now 
fighting separately, that fight itself would teach the 
workers that complete victory would be achieved only 
when the entire working class launched an assault against 
its enemy as a united, strong and organised force. This 
fight would also show the workers that in addition to 
their immediate enemy, the capitalist, they have another, 
still more vigilant foe — the organised force of the entire 
bourgeois class, the present capitalist state, with its 
armed forces, its courts, police, prisons and gendarme- 
rie. If even in Western Europe the slightest attempt 
of the workers to improve their condition comes into 
collision with the bourgeois power, if in Western Europe, 
where human rights have already been won, the workers 
are obliged to wage a direct struggle against the author- 
ities, how much more so must the workers in Russia, 
in their movement, inevitably come into collision with 
the autocratic power, which is the vigilant foe of every 
labour movement, not only because this power protects 



14 J. V. S TALI N 



the capitalists, but also because, as an autocratic power, 
it cannot resign itself to the independent action of social 
classes, particularly to the independent action of a class 
like the working class, which is more oppressed and 
downtrodden than other classes. That is how Russia 
Social-Democracy perceived the course of the movement, 
and it exerted all its efforts to spread these ideas among 
the workers. Herein lay its strength, and this explains its 
great and triumphant development from the very outset, 
as was proved by the great strike of the workers in the 
St. Petersburg weaving mills in 1896. 

But the first victories misled and turned the heads 
of certain weaklings. Just as the Utopian Socialists 
in their time had concentrated their attention exclu- 
sively on the ultimate goal and, dazzled by it, totally 
failed to see, or denied, the real labour movement that 
was developing under their very eyes, so certain Russian 
Social-Democrats, on the contrary, devoted all their 
attention exclusively to the spontaneous labour move- 
ment, to its everyday needs. At that time (five years 
ago), the class consciousness of the Russian workers 
was extremely low. The Russian workers were only just 
awakening from their age-long sleep, and their eyes, 
accustomed to darkness, failed, of course, to register 
all that was happening in a world that had become 
revealed to them for the first time. Their needs were not 
great, and so their demands were not great. The Russian 
workers still went no further than to demand slight 
increases in wages or a reduction of the working day. 
That it was necessary to change the existing system, 
that it was necessary to abolish private property, that 
it was necessary to organise a socialist system — of all 



THE R.S.D.L.P. AND ITS IMMEDIATE TASKS 15 

this the masses of the Russian workers had no inkling. 
They scarcely dared to think about abolishing the slav- 
ery in which the entire Russian people were submerged 
under the autocratic regime, to think about freedom for 
the people, to think about the people taking part in the 
government of the country. And so, while one section 
of Russian Social-Democracy deemed it its duty to carry 
its socialist ideas into the labour movement, the other 
part, absorbed in the economic struggle — the struggle 
for partial improvements in the conditions of the workers 
(as for example, reduction of the working day and higher 
wages) — was prone to forget entirely its great duty and 
its great ideals. 

Echoing their like-minded friends in Western Europe 
(called Bernsteinians), they said: "For us the movement 
is everything — the final aim is nothing." They were not 
in the least interested in what the working class was 
fighting for so long as it fought. The so-called farthing 
policy developed. Things reached such a pass that, one 
fine day, the St. Petersburg newspaper Rabochaya MysP 
announced. "Our political programme is a ten-hour day 
and the restitution of the holidays that were abolished 
by the law of June 2"3(!!!).* 

Instead of leading the spontaneous movement, in- 
stead of imbuing the masses with Social-Democratic 
ideals and guiding them towards the achievement of our 
final aim, this section of the Russian Social-Democrats 



* It must be stated that lately the St. Petersburg League 
of Struggle, and the editorial board of its newspaper, renounced 
their previous, exclusively economic, trend, and are now trying 
to introduce the idea of the political struggle into their activities. 



16 J. V. S TALI N 



became a blind instrument of the movement; it 
blindly followed in the wake of the inadequately educated 
section of the workers and limited itself to formulating 
those needs and requirements of which the masses of the 
workers were conscious at the time. In short, it stood and 
knocked at an open door, not daring to enter the house. 
It proved incapable of explaining to the masses of the 
workers either the final aim — socialism, or even the 
immediate aim — the overthrow of the autocracy; and 
what was still more deplorable, it regarded all this as 
useless and even harmful. It looked upon the Russian 
workers as children and was afraid of frightening them 
with such daring ideas. Nor is this all: in the opinion of 
a certain section of Social-Democracy, it was not necessary 
to wage a revolutionary struggle to bring about social- 
ism; all that was needed, in their opinion, was the eco- 
nomic struggle — strikes and trade unions, consumers' 
and producers' co-operative societies, and there you have 
socialism. It regarded as mistaken the doctrine of the 
old international Social-Democracy that a change in the 
existing system and the complete emancipation of the 
workers were impossible until political power had passed 
into the hands of the proletariat (the dictatorship of the 
proletariat). In its opinion there was nothing new in 
socialism and, strictly speaking, it did not differ from 
the existing capitalist system: it could easily fit into the 
existing system, every trade union and even every 
co-operative store or producers' co-operative society was 
already a "bit of socialism," they said. They imagined 
that by means of this absurd patching of old clothes 
they could make new garments for suffering mankind! 
But most deplorable of all, and in itself unintelligible 



THE R.S.D.L.P. AND ITS IMMEDIATE TASKS 17 

to revolutionaries, is the fact that this section of the 
Russian Social-Democrats have expanded the doctrine 
of their West-European teachers (Bernstein and Co.) to 
such a degree that they brazenly state that political 
freedom (freedom to strike, freedom of association, freedom 
of speech, etc.) is compatible with tsarism and, therefore, 
a political struggle as such, the struggle to overthrow the 
autocracy, is quite superfluous because, if you please, 
the economic struggle alone is enough to achieve the aim, 
it is enough for strikes to occur more often — despite 
government prohibition — for the government to tire 
of punishing the strikers, and in this way freedom to 
strike and to hold meetings will come of its own accord. 

Thus, these alleged "Social-Democrats" argued that 
the Russian workers should devote all their strength and 
energy entirely to the: economic struggle and should 
refrain from pursuing all sorts of "lofty ideals." In prac- 
tice, their actions found expression in the view that it 
was their duty to conduct only local activities in this or 
that town. They displayed no interest in the organisation 
of a Social-Democratic workers' party in Russia; on the 
contrary, they regarded the organisation of a party as a 
ridiculous and amusing game which would hinder them 
in the execution of their direct "duty" — to wage the eco- 
nomic struggle. Strikes and more strikes, and the col- 
lection of kopeks-for strike funds — such was the alpha 
and omega of their activities. 

You will no doubt think that since they have whit- 
tled down their tasks to such a degree, since they have 
renounced Social-Democratism, these worshippers of 
the spontaneous "movement" would have done a great 
deal, at least for that movement. But here, too, we are 



18 J. V. S TALI N 



deceived. The history of the St. Petersburg movement 
convinces us of this. Its splendid development and bold 
progress in the early stages, in 1895-97, was succeeded 
by blind wandering and, finally, the movement came 
to a halt. This is not surprising: all the efforts of the 
"Economists" to build up a stable organisation for the 
economic struggle invariably came up against the solid 
wall of the government and were always shattered against 
it. The frightful regime of police persecution destroyed 
all possibility of any kind of industrial organisation. 
Nor did the strikes bear any fruit, because out of every 
hundred strikes, ninety-nine were strangled in the 
clutches of the police; workers were ruthlessly ejected from 
St. Petersburg and their revolutionary energy was piti- 
lessly sapped by prison walls and Siberian frosts. We 
are profoundly convinced that this check (relative of 
course) to the movement was due not only to external 
conditions, the police regime; it was due no less to the check 
in the development of the very ideas, of the class con- 
sciousness of the workers, and, hence, to the waning of 
their revolutionary energy. 

Although the movement was developing, the workers 
could not widely understand the lofty aims and content 
of the struggle because the banner under which the 
Russian workers had to fight was still the old faded rag 
with its farthing motto of the economic struggle; conse- 
quently, the workers were bound to wage this struggle 
with reduced energy, reduced enthusiasm, reduced revo- 
lutionary striving, for great energy is engendered only 
for a great aim. 

But the danger that threatened this movement as a 
result of this would have been greater had not our con- 



THE R.S.D.L.P. AND ITS IMMEDIATE TASKS 19 

ditions of life, day by day and with increasing per- 
sistence, pushed the Russian workers towards the direct 
political struggle. Even a small simple strike brought 
the workers right up against the question of our lack of 
political rights, brought them into collision with the 
government and the armed forces, and glaringly revealed 
how inadequate the economic struggle was by itself. 
Consequently, despite the wishes of these "Social-Demo- 
crats," the struggle, day by day, increasingly assumed 
a distinctly political character. Every attempt of the 
awakened workers openly to express their discontent 
with the existing economic and political conditions under 
which the Russian workers are groaning today, every 
attempt to free themselves from this yoke, impelled the 
workers to resort to demonstrations of a kind in which 
the economic aspect of the struggle faded out more 
and more. The First of May celebrations in Russia laid 
the road to political struggle and to political dem- 
onstrations. And to the only weapon they possessed 
in their struggle in the past — the strike — the Russian 
workers added a new and powerful weapon — the po- 
litical demonstration, which was tried for the first 
time during the great Kharkov May Day rally in 1900. 

Thus, thanks to its internal development, the Russian 
labour movement proceeded from propaganda in study 
circles and the economic struggle by means of strikes 
to political struggle and agitation. 

This transition was markedly accelerated when the 
working class saw in the arena of the struggle elements 
from other social classes in Russia, marching with firm 
determination to win political freedom. 



20 J. V. S TALI N 



II 

The working class is not the only class that is groan- 
ing under the yoke of the tsarist regime. The heavy 
fist of the autocracy is also crushing other social classes. 
Groaning under the yoke are the Russian peasants, 
wasted from constant starvation, impoverished by the 
unbearable burden of taxation and thrown to the mercy 
of the grasping bourgeois traders and the "noble" land- 
lords. Groaning under the yoke are the little people in 
the towns, the minor employees in government and 
private offices, the minor officials — in general, that 
numerous lower class of the urban population whose 
existence is as insecure as that of the working class, and 
which has every reason to be discontented with its social 
conditions. Groaning under the yoke is that section of 
the petty bourgeoisie and even of the middle bourgeoi- 
sie which cannot resign itself to the tsar's knout and 
lash; this applies especially to the educated section of 
the bourgeoisie, the so-called representatives of the 
liberal professions (teachers, physicians, lawyers, uni- 
versity and high-school students). Groaning under the yoke 
are the oppressed nations and religious communities in 
Russia, including the Poles, who are being driven from 
their native land and whose most sacred sentiments are 
being outraged, and the Finns, whose rights and liber- 
ties, granted by history, the autocracy is arrogantly tram- 
pling underfoot. Groaning under the yoke are the eter- 
nally persecuted and humiliated Jews who lack even the 
miserably few rights enjoyed by other Russian subjects 
— the right to live in any part of the country they choose, 
the right to attend school, the right to be employed 



THE R.S.D.L.P. AND ITS IMMEDIATE TASKS 21 

in government service, and so forth. Groaning are the 
Georgians, Armenians, and other nations who are de- 
prived of the right to have their own schools and be 
employed in government offices, and are compelled to 
submit to the shameful and oppressive policy of Russi- 
fication so zealously pursued by the autocracy. Groan- 
ing are the many millions of Russian non-conformists 
who wish to believe and worship in accordance with 
the dictates of their conscience and not with the wishes 
of the orthodox priests. Groaning are . . . but it is 
impossible to enumerate all the oppressed, all who are 
persecuted by the Russian autocracy. They are so numer- 
ous that if they were all aware of this, and were aware 
who their common enemy is, the despotic regime in 
Russia would not exist another day. Unfortunately, 
the Russian peasantry is still downtrodden by age- 
long slavery, poverty and ignorance; it is only just 
awakening, it does not yet know who its enemy is. The 
oppressed nations in Russia cannot even dream of liber- 
ating themselves by their own efforts so long as they 
are opposed not only by the Russian government, but 
even by the Russian people, who have not yet realised 
that their common enemy is the autocracy. There re- 
main the working class, the little people among the 
urban population, and the educated section of the bour- 
geoisie. 

But the bourgeoisie of all countries and nations is 
very skilful in reaping the fruits of another's victory, 
very skilful in getting others to pull its chestnuts out 
of the fire. It never wishes to jeopardise its own rela- 
tively privileged position in the struggle against the 
powerful foe, the struggle which, as yet, it is not so easy 



22 J. V. S TALI N 



to win. Although it is discontented, its conditions of 
life are tolerable and, therefore, it gladly yields to 
the working class, and to the common people in general, 
the right to offer their backs to the Cossacks' whips 
and the soldiers' bullets, to fight at the barricades, and 
so forth. It "sympathises" with the struggle and at best 
expresses "indignation" (under its breath) at the cruel- 
ty with which the brutal enemy is quelling the pop- 
ular movement. It is afraid of revolutionary action 
and resorts to revolutionary measures itself only at 
the last moment of the struggle, when the enemy's 
impotence is evident. This is what the experience of 
history teaches us. . . . Only the working class, and 
the people generally, who in the struggle have nothing 
to lose but their chains, they, only they, constitute 
a genuine revolutionary force. And Russia's expe- 
rience, although still meagre, confirms this ancient 
truth taught by the history of all revolutionary move- 
ments. 

Of the representatives of the privileged class only 
a section of the students have displayed determination to 
fight to the end for the satisfaction of their demands. But 
we must not forget that this section, too, of the students 
consists of sons of these same oppressed citizens, and that, 
until they have plunged into the sea of life and have occu- 
pied a definite social position, the students, being young 
intellectuals, are more inclined than any other cate- 
gory to strive for ideals which call them to fight for 
freedom. 

Be that as it may, at the present time the students 
are coming out in the "social" movement almost as 
leaders, as the vanguard. The discontented sections of 



THE R.S.D.L.P. AND ITS IMMEDIATE TASKS 23 

different social classes are now rallying around them. 
At first the students tried to fight with a weapon bor- 
rowed from the workers — the strike. But when the govern- 
ment retaliated to their strikes by passing the brutal 
law ("Provisional Regulations'"^) under which students 
who went on strike were drafted into the army, the stu- 
dents had only one weapon left — to demand assistance 
from the Russian public and to pass from strikes to street 
demonstrations. And that is what the students did. 
They did not lay down their arms; on the contrary, they 
fought still more bravely and resolutely. Around them 
rallied the oppressed citizens, a helping hand was of- 
fered them by the working class, and the movement 
became powerful, a menace to the government. For two 
years already, the government of Russia has been wag 
ing a fierce but fruitless struggle against the rebellious 
citizens with the aid of its numerous troops, police 
and gendarmes. 

The events of the past few days prove that political 
demonstrations cannot be defeated. The events in the 
early days of December in Kharkov, Moscow, Nizhni- 
Novgorod, Riga and other places show that public dis- 
content is now manifesting itself consciously, and that 
the discontented public is ready to pass from silent pro- 
test to revolutionary action. But the demands of the 
students for freedom of education, for non-interference 
in internal university life, are too narrow for :the 
broad social movement. To unite all the participants 
in this movement a banner is needed, a banner that will 
be understood and cherished by all and will combine 
all demands. Such a banner is one inscribed: Over- 
throw the autocracy. Only on the ruins of the autocracy 



24 J. V. S TALI N 



will it be possible to build a social system that will 
be based on government by the people and ensure 
freedom of education, freedom to strike, freedom of 
speech, freedom of religion, freedom for nationalities, 
etc., etc. Only such a system will provide the peo- 
ple with means to protect themselves against all op- 
pressors, against the grasping merchants and capital- 
ists, the clergy and the nobility; only such a system 
will open a free road to a better future, to the unhin- 
dered struggle for the establishment of the socialist 
system. 

The students cannot, of course, wage this stupendous 
struggle by their own efforts alone; their weak hands 
cannot hold this heavy banner. To hold this banner 
stronger hands are needed, and under present condi- 
tions this strength lies only in the united forces- of 
the working people. Hence, the working class must 
take the all-Russian banner out of the weak hands of 
the students and, inscribing on it the slogan: "Down 
with the autocracy! Long live a democratic consti- 
tution!", lead the Russian people to freedom. We 
must be grateful to the students for the lesson they 
have taught us: they showed how enormously impor- 
tant political demonstrations are in the revolutionary 
struggle. 

Street demonstrations are interesting in that they 
quickly draw large masses of the people into the move- 
ment, acquaint them with our demands at once and create 
extensive favourable soil in which we can boldly sow 
the seeds of socialist ideas and of political freedom. 
Street demonstrations give rise to street agitation, to 
the influence of which the backward and timid section 



THE R.S.D.L.P. AND ITS IMMEDIATE TASKS 29 

of society cannot help yielding.* A man has only to go out 
into the street during a demonstration to see courageous 
fighters, to understand what they are fighting for, to 
hear free voices calling upon everybody to join the 
struggle, and militant songs denouncing the existing 
system and exposing our social evils. That is why the 
government fears street demonstrations more than any- 
thing else. That is why it threatens with dire punish- 
ment not only the demonstrators, but also the "curious 
onlookers." In this curiosity of the people lurks the 
chief danger that threatens the government: the "curious 
onlooker" of today will be a demonstrator tomorrow 
and rally new groups of "curious onlookers" around him- 
self. And today there are tens of thousands of such "cu- 
rious onlookers" in every large town. Russians no longer 
run into hiding, as they did before, on hearing of disor- 
ders taking place somewhere or other ("I'd better get out 
of the way in case I get into trouble," they used to say); 
today they flock to the scene of the disorders and evince 
"curiosity": they are eager to know why these disorders 
are taking place, why so many people offer their backs 
to the lash of the Cossacks' whip. 

In these circumstances, the "curious onlookers" 
cease to listen indifferently to the swish of whips 
and sabres. The "curious onlookers" see that the demon- 
strators have assembled in the streets to express their 
wishes and demands, and that the government retaliates 



* Under the conditions at present prevailing in Russia 
illegally printed books and agitation leaflets reach each inhab- 
itant with enormous difficulty. Although the effects of the 
distribution of such literature are considerable, in most cases 
it covers only a minority of the population. 



26 J. V. S TALI N 



by beatings and brutal suppression. The "curious onlook- 
ers" no longer run away on hearing the swish of whips; 
on the contrary, they draw nearer, and the whips can 
no longer distinguish between the "curious onlook- 
ers" and the "rioters." Now, conforming to "complete 
democratic equality" the whips play on the backs 
of all, irrespective of sex, age and even class. There- 
by, the whip lash is rendering us a great service, for 
it is hastening the revolutionisation of the "curious 
onlookers." It is being transformed from an instrument 
for taming into an instrument for rousing the people. 

Hence, even if street demonstrations do not produce 
direct results for us, even if the demonstrators are still 
too weak today to compel the government immediately 
to yield to the popular demands — the sacrifices we make 
in street demonstrations today will be compensated a 
hundredfold. Every militant who falls in the struggle, or 
is torn out of our ranks, rouses hundreds of new fight- 
ers. For the time being we shall be beaten more than 
once in the street; the government will continue to emerge 
victorious from street fighting again and again; but 
these will be Pyrrhic victories. A few more victories 
like these — and the defeat of absolutism is inevitable. 
The victories it achieves today are preparing its defeat. 
And we, firmly convinced that that day will come, that 
that day is not far distant, risk the lash in order to 
sow the seeds of political agitation and socialism. 

The government is no less convinced than we are 
that street agitation spells its death warrant, that within 
another two or three years the spectre of a people' s rev- 
olution will loom before it. The other day the govern- 
ment announced through the mouth of the Governor of 



THE R.S.D.L.P. AND ITS IMMEDIATE TASKS 27 

Yekaterinoslav Gubernia that it "will not hesitate to 
resort to extreme measures to crush the slightest attempt 
at a street demonstration." As you see, this statement 
smacks of bullets, and perhaps even of shells, but we 
think that bullets are no less potent than whips as a 
means of rousing discontent. We do not think that the 
government will be able even with the aid of such "ex- 
treme measures" to restrain political agitation for long 
and hinder its development. We hope that revolutionary 
Social-Democracy will succeed in adjusting its agitation 
to the new conditions which the government will create 
by resorting to these "extreme measures." In any case, 
Social-Democracy must watch events vigilantly, it must 
quickly apply the lessons taught by these events, and 
skilfully adjust its activities to the changing condi- 
tions. 

But to be able to do this, Social-Democracy must 
have a strong and compact organisation, to be precise, 
a party organisation, that is united not only in name, 
but also in its fundamental principles and tactical views. 
Our task is to work to create this strong party that is 
armed with firm principles and impenetrable secrecy. 

The Social-Democratic Party must take advantage of 
the new street movement that has commenced, it must 
take the banner of Russian democracy into its own hands 
and lead it to the victory that all desirel 

Thus, there is opening up before us a period of prima- 
rily political struggle. Such a struggle is inevitable for us 
because, under present political conditions, the economic 
struggle (strikes) cannot produce substantial results. 
Even in free countries the strike is a two-edged sword: 
even there, although the workers possess the means 



28 J. V. S TALI N 



of fighting — political freedom, strongly organised labour 
unions and large funds — strikes often end in the defeat 
of the workers. In our country, however, where strikes 
are a crime punishable by arrest and are suppressed by 
armed force, where all labour unions are prohibited, 
strikes acquire the significance only of a protest. For the 
purpose of protest, however, demonstrations are far more 
powerful weapons. In strikes the forces of the workers 
are dispersed; the workers of only one factory, or of 
a few factories and, at best, of one trade, take part; the 
organisation of a general strike is a very difficult matter 
even in Western Europe, but in our country it is quite 
impossible. In street demonstrations, however, the work- 
ers unite their forces at once. 

All this shows what a narrow view is taken by those 
"Social-Democrats" who want to confine the labour 
movement to the economic struggle and industrial organ- 
isation, to leave the political struggle to the "intelli- 
gentsia," to the students, to society, and assign to the 
workers only the role of an auxiliary force. History 
teaches that under such circumstances the workers will 
merely pull the chestnuts out of the fire for the bourgeoi- 
sie. The bourgeoisie, as a rule, gladly utilise the muscular 
arms of the workers in the struggle against autocrat- 
ic government, and when victory has been achieved 
they reap its fruits and leave the workers empty-handed; 
If this happens in our country, the workers will gain 
nothing from this struggle. As regards the students and 
other dissidents among the public — they, after all, also 
belong to the bourgeoisie. It will be sufficient to give 
them a harmless, "plucked constitution" that grants 
the people only the most insignificant rights, for all 



THE R.S.D.L.P. AND ITS IMMEDIATE TASKS 29 

these dissidents to sing a different song: they will 
begin to extol the "new" regime. The bourgeoisie live 
in constant dread of the "red spectre" of communism, 
and in all revolutions they try to put a stop to things 
when they are only just beginning. After receiving a tiny 
concession in their favour they, terrified by the workers, 
stretch out a hand of conciliation to the government 
and shamelessly betray the cause of freedom.* 

The working class alone is a reliable bulwark of gen- 
uine democracy. It alone finds it impossible to compromise 
with the autocracy for the sake of a concession, and it 
will not allow itself to be lulled by sweet songs sung to 
the accompaniment of the constitutional lute. 

Hence the question as to whether the working class 
will succeed in taking the lead in the general democrat- 
ic movement, or whether it will drag at the tail of the 
movement in the capacity of an auxiliary force of the 
"intelligentsia," i.e., the bourgeoisie, is an extremely 
important one for the cause of democracy in Russia. In 
the former case, the overthrow of the autocracy will 
result in a broad democratic constitution, which will 
grant equal rights to the workers, to the downtrodden 
peasantry and to the capitalists. In the latter case, we 
shall have that "plucked constitution," which will be 
able, no less than absolutism, to trample upon the de- 
mands of the workers and will grant the people the mere 
shadow of freedom. 



* Here, of course, we do not mean that section of the intelli- 
gentsia which is already renouncing its class and is fighting in 
the ranks of the Social-Democrats. But such intellectuals are 
only exceptions, they are "white ravens." 



J. V. S T A L I N 30 



But in order to be able to play this leading role, 
the working class must organise in an independent politi- 
cal party. If it does that, no betrayal or treachery on 
the part of its temporary ally — "society" — will have 
any terrors for it in the struggle against absolutism. The 
moment this "society" betrays the cause of democracy, 
the working class itself will lead that cause forward by 
its own efforts — the independent political party will 
give it the necessary strength to do so. 

Brdzola (The Struggle), No. 2-3, 
November-December 1901 

Unsigned 

Translated from the Georgian 



THE SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC VIEW 
ON THE NATIONAL QUESTION 



I 

Everything changes. . . . Social life changes, and 
with it the "national question" changes, too. At different 
periods different classes enter the arena, and each class 
has its own view of the "national question." Consequently, 
in different periods the "national question" serves differ- 
ent interests and assumes different shades, according to 
which class raises it, and when. 

For instance, we had the so-called ''national question'" 
of the nobility, when — after the "annexation of Georgia 
to Russia" — the Georgian nobility, realising how dis- 
advantageous it was for them to lose the old privileges 
and power they had enjoyed under the Georgian kings, 
and regarding the status of "mere subjects" as being 
derogatory to their dignity wanted the ""liberation of 
Georgia." Their aim was to place the Georgian kings and 
the Georgian nobility at the head of "Georgia,"" and thus 
place the destiny of the Georgian people in their hands! 
That y\ras feudal-monarchist "nationalism." This "move- 
ment" left no visible trace in the life of the Georgians; 
not a single fact sheds glory on it, if we leave out of 
account isolated conspiracies hatched by Georgian nobles 



32 J. V. S TALI N 



against the Russian rulers in the Caucasus. A slight touch 
from the events of social life to this already feeble "move- 
ment" was enough to cause it to collapse to its founda- 
tions. Indeed, the development of commodity production, 
the abolition of serfdom, the establishment of the Nobles' 
Bank, the intensification of class antagonisms in town 
and country, the growth of the poor peasants' movement, 
etc. — all this dealt a mortal blow to the Georgian nobil- 
ity and, with it, to '"'feudal-monarchist nationalism.'''' 
The Georgian nobility split into two groups. One re- 
nounced all "nationalism" and stretched forth its hand to 
the Russian autocracy with the object of obtaining soft 
jobs, cheap credit and agricultural implements, the 
government's protection against the rural "rebels," etc. 
The other, the weaker section of the Georgian nobility; 
struck up a friendship with the Georgian bishops and 
archimandrites, and thus found under the protecting wing 
of clericalism a sanctuary for the "nationalism" which is 
being hounded by realities. This group is working zeal- 
ously to restore ruined Georgian churches (that is the main 
item in its "programme"!) — "the monuments of departed 
glory" — and is reverently waiting for a miracle that will 
enable it to achieve its feudal-monarchist "aspirations." 

Thus, in the last moments of its existence, feu- 
dal-monarchist nationalism has assumed a clerical 
form. 

Meanwhile, our contemporary social life has brought 
the national question of the bourgeoisie to the fore. When 
the young Georgian bourgeoisie realised how difficult it 
was to contend with the free competition of "foreign" 
capitalists, it began, through the mouths of the Georgian 
National-Democrats, to prattle about an independent 



THE SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC VIEW OF THE NATIONAL QUESTION 33 

Georgia. The Georgian bourgeoisie wanted to fence off 
the Georgian market with a tariff wall, to drive the 
"foreign" bourgeoisie from this market by force, arti- 
ficially raise prices, and by means of "patriotic" tricks 
of this sort to achieve success in the money-making 
arena. 

This was, and is, the aim of the nationalism of the 
Georgian bourgeoisie. Needless to say, to achieve this 
aim, strength was required — but only the proletariat 
possessed this strength. Only the proletariat could in- 
fuse life into the emasculated "patriotism" of the bour- 
geoisie. It was necessary to win over the proletariat — 
and so the "National-Democrats" appeared on the scene. 
They spent a great deal of ammunition in the endeavour 
to refute scientific socialism, decried the Social-Demo- 
crats and advised the Georgian proletarians to desert 
them, lauded the Georgian proletariat and urged it to 
strengthen in one way or another the Georgian bourgeoi- 
sie "in the interests of the workers themselves." They 
pleaded incessantly with the Georgian proletarians: 
Don't ruin "Georgia" (or the Georgian bourgeoisie?), 
forget "internal differences," make friends with the 
Georgian bourgeoisie, etc. But all in vain! The honeyed 
words of the bourgeois publicists failed to lull the Geor- 
gian proletariat! The merciless attacks of the Georgian 
Marxists and, particularly, the powerful class actions 
which welded Russian, Armenian, Georgian and other 
proletarians into a single socialist force, dealt our bour- 
geois nationalists a crushing blow and drove them from 
the battle-field. 

Since our fugitive patriots were unable to assim- 
ilate socialist views, they were obliged, "in order to 



34 J. V. S TALI N 



rehabilitate their tarnished names," "at least to 
change their colour," at least to deck themselves in social- 
ist garb. And indeed, an illegal . . . bourgeois-nationalist 
— "socialist," if you please — organ suddenly appeared 
on the scene, Sakartvelo^l That was how they wanted to 
seduce the Georgian workers! But it was too late! The 
Georgian workers had learned to distinguish between 
black and white, they easily guessed that the bourgeois 
nationalists had "changed only the colour" but not the 
substance of their views, that Sakartvelo was socialist 
only in name. They realised this and made a laugh- 
ing-stock of these "saviours" of Georgia! The hopes of 
the Don Quixotes oi Sakartvelo were dashed to the ground! 

On the other hand, our economic development is 
gradually building a bridge between the advanced circles 
of the Georgian bourgeoisie and "Russia"; it is connect- 
ing these circles with "Russia" both economically and 
politically, thereby cutting the ground from under the 
feet of already tottering bourgeois nationalism. This is 
another blow to bourgeois nationalism! 

A new class has entered the arena — the proletariat — 
and, with it, a new "national question," has arisen — 'Hhe 
national question''' of the proletariat. And the "national 
question" raised by the proletariat differs from the 
"national question" of the nobility and of the bourgeoi- 
sie to the same degree that the proletariat differs from 
the nobility and the bourgeoisie. 

Let us now discuss this "nationalism." 

What is the Social-Democratic view of the ''national 
question"! 

The proletariat of all Russia began to talk about the 
struggle long ago. As we know, the goal of every struggle 



THE SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC VIEW OF THE NATIONAL QUESTION 35 

is victory. But if the proletariat is to achieve victory, 
all the workers, irrespective of nationality, must be 
united. Clearly, the demolition of national barriers 
and close unity between the Russian, Georgian, Arme- 
nian, Polish, Jewish and other proletarians is a neces- 
sary condition for the victory of the proletariat of all 
Russia. 

That is in the interests of the proletariat of all Russia. 

But the Russian autocracy, the bitterest enemy of 
the proletariat of all Russia, is constantly counteracting 
the efforts to unite the proletarians. It brutally perse- 
cutes the national cultures, the languages, customs and 
institutions of the "alien" nationalities in Russia. 
It deprives them of their essential civil rights, oppresses 
them in every way, hypocritically sows distrust and 
hostility among them and incites them to bloody 
collisions. This shows that its sole object is to sow dis- 
cord among the nations that inhabit Russia, to intensify 
national strife among them, to reinforce national barriers 
in order more successfully to disunite the proletar- 
ians, more successfully to split the entire proletariat 
of Russia into small national groups and in this way 
bury the class consciousness of the workers, their class 
unity. 

That is in the interests of Russian reaction; such is 
the policy of the Russian autocracy. 

Obviously, sooner or later, the interests of the pro- 
letariat of all Russia inevitably had to come into colli- 
sion with the tsarist autocracy's reactionary policy. 
That is what actually happened and what brought 
up the "national question" in the Social-Democratic 
movement. 



36 J. V. S TALI N 



How are the national barriers that have been raised 
between the nations to be demolished? How is national 
isolation to be eliminated in order to draw the proletar- 
ians of all Russia closer together and to unite them more 
closely? 

That is the substance of the "national question" in 
the Social-Democratic movement. 

Divide up into separate national parties and estab- 
lish a "loose federation" of these parties — answer the 
Federalist Social-Democrats. 

That is just what the Armenian Social-Democratic 
Labour Organisation^ is talking about all the time. 

As you see, we are advised not to unite into one all- 
Russian party with a single directing centre, but to divide 
up into several parties with several directing centres — 
all in order to strengthen class unity! We want to draw 
together the proletarians of the different nations. What 
should we do? Divide the proletarians from one another 
and you will achieve your aim! answer the Federalist 
Social-Democrats. We want to unite the proletarians 
in one party. What should we do? Split up the proletar- 
ians of all Russia into separate parties and you will 
achieve your aim! answer the Federalist Social-Demo- 
crats. We want to demolish national barriers. What 
measures shall we take? Reinforce the national barriers 
with organisational barriers and you will achieve your 
aim! they reply. And all this advice is offered to us, 
the proletarians of all Russia, who are fighting under 
the same political conditions, and against a common 
enemy! In short, we are told: Act so as to please your 
enemies and bury your common goal with your own 
hands! 



THE SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC VIEW OF THE NATIONAL QUESTION 37 

But let us agree with the Federalist Social-Demo- 
crats for a moment, let us follow them and see where 
they will lead us! It has been said: "Pursue the liar to 
the threshold of the lie." 

Let us assume that we have taken the advice of our 
Federalists and have formed separate national parties. 
What would be the results? 

This is not difficult to see. Hitherto, while we were 
Centralists, we concentrated our attention mainly on 
the common conditions of the proletarians, on the unity 
of their interests, and spoke of their "national distinc- 
tions" only in so far as these did not contradict their 
common interests; hitherto, our major question was: in 
what way do the proletarians of the different nationali- 
ties of Russia resemble each other, what have they in 
common? — for our object was to build a single central- 
ised party of the workers of the whole of Russia on the 
basis of these common interests. Now that "we" have 
become Federalists, our attention is engaged by a differ- 
ent major question, namely: in what way do the prole- 
tarians of the different nationalities of Russia differ 
from one another, what are the distinctions between 
them? — for our object is to build separate national par- 
ties on the basis of "national distinctions." Thus, "nation- 
al distinctions," which are of minor importance for 
the Centralist, become, for the Federalist, the founda- 
tion of national parties. 

If we follow this path further we shall, sooner or 
later, be obliged to conclude that the "national" and, 
perhaps, some other "distinctions" of, say, the Armenian 
proletarians are the same as those of the Armenian bour- 
geoisie; that the Armenian proletarian and the Armenian 



38 J. V. S TALI N 



bourgeois have the same customs and character; that they 
constitute one people, one indivisible "nation."* From 
this it is not a far cry to "common ground for joint ac- 
tion," on which the bourgeois and the proletarian must 
stand and join hands as members of the same "nation." 
The hypocritical policy of the autocratic tsar may appear 
as "additional" proof in support of such friendship. 



* The Armenian Social-Democratic Labour Organisation 
has just taken this laudable step. In its "Manifesto" it emphati- 
cally declares that "the proletariat (Armenian) cannot be sepa- 
rated from society (Armenian): the united (Armenian) proletariat 
must be the most intelligent and the strongest organ of the Arme- 
nian people"; that "the Armenian proletariat, united in a social- 
ist party, must strive to mould Armenian social opinion, that 
the Armenian proletariat will be a true son of its tribe," etc. (see 
Clause 3 of the "Manifesto" of the Armenian Social-Democratic 
Labour Organisation). 

In the first place, it is difficult to see why "the Armenian 
proletariat cannot be separated from Armenian society," when 
actually this "separation" is taking place at every step. Did not 
the united Armenian proletariat "separate" from Armenian society 
when, in 1900 (in Tiflis), it declared war against the Armenian 
bourgeoisie and bourgeois-minded Armenians?! What is the 
Armenian Social-Democratic Labour Organisation itself, if not 
a class organisation of Armenian proletarians who have "sepa- 
rated" from the other classes in Armenian society? Or, perhaps 
the Armenian Social-Democratic Labour Organisation is an organ- 
isation that represents all classes!? And can the militant Arme- 
nian proletariat confine itself to "moulding Armenian social 
opinion"? Is it not its duty to march forward, to declare war upon 
this "social opinion," which is bourgeois through and through, 
and to infuse a revolutionary spirit into it? The facts say that it 
is its duty to do so. That being the case, it is self-evident that 
the "Manifesto" should have drawn its readers' attention not to 
"moulding social opinion," but to the struggle against it, to the 



THE SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC VIEW OF THE NATIONAL QUESTION 39 

whereas talk about class antagonisms may appear as 
"misplaced doctrinairism." And then somebody's poetic 
fingers will "more boldly" touch the narrow-national 
strings that still exist in the hearts of the proletarians of 
the different nationalities in Russia and make them 
sound in the proper key. Credit (confidence) will be granted 



necessity of revolutionising it — that would have been a more 
correct description of the duties of the "socialist proletariat." 
And, lastly, can the Armenian proletariat be "a true son of its 
tribe," if one section of this tribe — the Armenian bourgeoi- 
sie — sucks its blood like a vampire, and another section — the 
Armenian clergy — in addition to sucking the blood of the work- 
ers, is systematically engaged in corrupting their minds? All 
these questions are plain and inevitable, if we look at things from 
the standpoint of the class struggle. But the authors of the "Man- 
ifesto" fail to see these questions, because they look at things 
from the Federalist-nationalistic standpoint they have borrowed 
from the Bund (the Jewish Workers' Union). ^ In general, it seems 
as though the authors of the "Manifesto" have set out to ape the 
Bund in all things. In their "Manifesto" they also introduced 
Clause 2 of the resolution of the Fifth Congress of the Bund: "The 
Bund's Position in the Party." They describe the Armenian 
Social-Democratic Labour Organisation as the sole champion of 
the interests of the Armenian proletariat (see Clause 3 of the above- 
mentioned "Manifesto"). The authors of the "Manifesto" have 
forgotten that for several years now the Caucasian Committees 
of our Party^ have been regarded as the representatives of the 
Armenian (and other) proletarians in the Caucasus, that they 
are developing class consciousness in them by means of oral and 
printed propaganda and agitation in the Armenian language, and 
are guiding them in their struggle, etc., whereas the Armenian 
Social-Democratic Labour Organisation came into being only 
the other day. They have forgotten all this and, no doubt, will 
forget many other things for the sake of faithfully copying the 
Bund's organisational and political views. 



40 J. V. S T A L I N 



to chauvinistic humbug, friends will be taken for 
enemies, enemies for friends — confusion will ensue, and 
the class consciousness of the proletariat of all Russia 
will wane. 

Thus, thanks to the Federalists, instead of breaking 
down the national barriers we shall reinforce them with 
organisational barriers; instead of stimulating the class 
consciousness of the proletariat we shall stultify it and 
subject it to a dangerous strain. And the autocratic 
tsar "will rejoice in his heart," for he would never 
have obtained such unpaid assistants as we would be 
for him. 

Is that, then, what we have been striving for? 

And, lastly, at a time when we need a single, flexi- 
ble, centralised party, whose Central Committee should 
be able to rouse the workers of the whole of Russia at a 
moment's notice and lead them in a decisive onslaught 
upon the autocracy and the bourgeoisie, we are offered 
a monstrous "federal league" broken up into separate 
parties! Instead of a sharp weapon, they hand us a rusty 
one and assure us: With this you will more speedily 
wipe out your mortal enemies! 

That is where the Federalist Social-Democrats are 
leading us! 

But since our aim is not to "reinforce national bar- 
riers," but to break them down; since we need not a 
rusty, but a sharp weapon to uproot existing injustice; 
since we want to give the enemy cause not for rejoicing 
but for lamentation, and want to make him bite the dust, 
it is obviously our duty to turn our backs on the Federal- 
ists and find a better means of solving the "national 
question." 



THE SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC VIEW OF THE NATIONAL QUESTION 41 

II 

So far we have discussed the way the "national ques- 
tion" should not be solved. Let us now discuss the way 
this question should be-solved, i.e., the way it has been 
solved by the Social-Democratic Labour Party.* 

To begin with, we must bear in mind that the Social- 
Democratic Party which functions in Russia called itself 
Rossiiskaya (and not Russkaya).** Obviously, by this it 
wanted to convey to us that it will gather under its 
banner not only Russian proletarians, but the proletar- 
ians of all the nationalities in Russia, and, consequently, 
that it will do everything to break down the national 
barriers that have been raised to separate them. 

Further, our Party has dispelled the fog which en- 
veloped the "national question" and which lent it an air 
of mystery; it has divided this question into its sepa- 
rate elements, has lent each element the character of a 
class demand, and has expounded them in its programme 
in the form of separate clauses. Thereby it has clearly 
shown us that, taken by themselves, the so-called "nation- 
al interests" and "national demands" are of no particular 
value; that these "interests," and "demands" deserve our 
attention only in so far as they stimulate, or can stimulate, 
the proletariat's class consciousness, its class develop- 
ment. 



* It will not be amiss to point out that the following is a 
comment on the clauses of our Party programme which deal with 
the national question. 

** The adjective Rossiiskaya was applied to the whole land of 
Russia with all its different nationalities. Russkaya applies more 
specifically to the Russian people. In English both are rendered 
by the word Russian. — Tr. 



42 J. V. S T A L I N 



The Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party has 
thereby clearly mapped the path it has chosen and the 
position it has taken in solving the "national question." 

What are the elements of the "national question"? 

What do Messieurs the Federalist Social-Democrats 
demand? 

1) ''Civil equality for the nationalities in Russia?" 

You are disturbed by the civil inequality that pre- 
vails in Russia? You want to restore to the nationali- 
ties in Russia the civil rights taken away by the gov- 
ernment and therefore you demand civil equality for 
these nationalities? But are we opposed to this demand. 
We are perfectly aware of the great importance of civil 
rights for the proletarians. Civil rights are a weapon in 
the struggle; to take away civil rights means taking 
away a weapon; and who does not know that unarmed 
proletarians cannot fight well? It is necessary for the 
proletariat of all Russia, however, that the proletarians 
of all the nationalities inhabiting Russia should fight 
well; for, the better these proletarians fight, the greater 
will be their class consciousness, and the greater their 
class consciousness, the closer will be, the class unity 
of the proletariat of all Russia. Yes, we know all this, 
and that is why we are fighting, and will go on fighting 
with, all our might, for the civil equality of the nationali- 
ties in Russia! Read Clause 7 of our Party programme, 
where the Party speaks of "complete equality of rights 
for all citizens, irrespective of sex, religion, race or na- 
tionality," and you will see that the Russian Social-Dem- 
ocratic Labour Party sets out to achieve these demands. 

What else do the Federalist Social-Democrats de- 
mand? 



THE SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC VIEW OF THE NATIONAL QUESTION 43 

2) ""Freedom of language for the nationalities in 
Russia?'' 

You are disturbed by the fact that the proletarians 
of the "alien" nationalities in Russia are practically 
forbidden to receive education in their own languages, or 
to speak their own languages in public, state and other 
institutions? Yes, it is something to be disturbed about! 
Language is an instrument of development and struggle. 
Different nations have different languages. The interests 
of the proletariat of all Russia demand that the proletar- 
ians of the different nationalities inhabiting Russia shall 
have full right to use the language in which it is easiest 
for them to receive education, in which they can best op- 
pose their enemies at meetings or in public, state and 
other institutions. That language is the native language. 
They ask: Can we keep silent when the proletarians of 
the "alien" nationalities are deprived of their native 
language? Well, and what does our Party programme say 
to the proletariat of all Russia on this point? Read Clause 8 
of our Party programme, in which our Party demands 
"the right of the population to receive education in their 
native languages, this right to be ensured by the estab- 
lishment of schools for this purpose at the expense of the 
state and of local government bodies; the right of every 
citizen to speak at meetings in his native language; 
the introduction of the native language on a par with 
the official state language in all local public and state 
institutions" — read all this, and you will see that the 
Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party sets out to 
achieve this demand as well. 

What else do the Federalist Social-Democrats de- 
mand? 



44 J. V. S T A L I N 



3) '"'Self-government for the nationalities in Russia?" 
By that you want to say that the same laws cannot be 

applied in the same way in the various localities of the 
Russian state which differ from one another in specific 
conditions of life and composition of the popula- 
tion? You want these localities to have the right to 
adapt the general laws of the state to their own specific 
conditions? If that is the case, if that is what you 
mean by your demand, you should formulate it properly; 
you should dispel the nationalistic fog and confusion 
and call a spade a spade. And if you follow this advice 
you will see for yourselves that we have no objection to 
such a demand. We have no doubt at all that the various 
localities of the Russian state which differ from one an- 
other in specific conditions of life and composition of the 
population, cannot all apply the state constitution in the 
same way, that such localities must be granted the right 
to put into effect the general state constitution in such a 
way as will benefit them most and contribute to the fuller 
development of the political forces of the people. This is in 
the class interests of the proletariat of all Russia. And 
if you re-read Clause 3 of our Party programme, in which 
our Party demands "wide local self-government; regional 
self-government for those localities which are differen- 
tiated by their special conditions of life and the com- 
position of their population," you will see that the Rus- 
sian Social-Democratic Labour Party first dispelled the 
nationalistic fog which enveloped this demand and then 
set out to achieve it. 

4) You point to the tsarist autocracy, which is bru- 
tally persecuting the "national culture" of the "alien" 
nationalities in Russia, which is violently interfering 



THE SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC VIEW OF THE NATIONAL QUESTION 45 

in their internal life and oppressing them in every way, 
which has barbarously destroyed (and goes on destroying) 
the cultural institutions of the Finns, has robbed Arme- 
nia of her national property, etc.? You demand guaran- 
tees against the robber violence of the autocracy? 
But are we blind to the violence which the tsarist autoc- 
racy is perpetrating? And have we not always fought 
against this violence?! Everyone today clearly sees how 
the present Russian government oppresses and strangles 
the "alien" nationalities which inhabit Russia. It is 
also beyond all doubt that this policy of the government 
is day after day corrupting the class consciousness of the 
all-Russian proletariat and exposing it to a dangerous 
strain. Consequently, we shall always and everywhere 
fight the tsarist government's corrupting policy. Conse- 
quently, we shall always and everywhere defend against 
the autocracy's police violence not only the useful, but 
even the useless institutions of these nationalities; for 
the interests of the proletariat of all Russia suggest to 
us that only the nationalities themselves have the right 
to abolish or develop this or that aspect of their national 
culture. But read Clause 9 of our programme. Is not this 
the purport of Clause 9 of our Party programme, which, 
incidentally, has caused much argument among both our 
enemies and our friends? 

But here we are interrupted with the advice to stop 
talking about Clause 9. But why? we ask. "Because," 
we are told, this clause of our programme "fundamentally 
contradicts" Clauses 3, 7 and 8 of the same programme; 
because, if the nationalities are granted the right to ar- 
range all their national affairs according to their own 
will (see Clause 9), there should be no room in this 



46 J. V. S T A L I N 



programme for Clauses 3, 7 and 8; and, vice versa, if these 
clauses are left in the programme. Clause 9 must certainly 
be deleted from the programme. Undoubtedly, Sakartvelo* 
means something of the same sort when it asks with its 
characteristic levity: "Where is the logic in saying to 
a nation, 'I grant you regional self-government,' and 
reminding it at the same time that it has the right to ar- 
range all its national affairs as it sees fit?" (see Sakart- 
velo, No. 9). "Obviously," a logical contradiction has crept 
into the programme; "obviously," one or several clauses 
must be deleted from the programme if this contradiction 
is to be eliminated! Yes, this must "certainly" be done, 
for, as you see, logic itself is protesting through the me- 
dium of the illogical Sakartvelo. 

This calls to mind an ancient parable. Once upon a 
time there lived a "learned anatomist." He possessed 
"everything" a "real" anatomist requires: a degree, an 
operating room, instruments and inordinate pretensions. 
He lacked only one minor detail — knowledge of anatomy. 
One day he was asked to explain the connection between 
the various parts of a skeleton that were lying scattered 
on his anatomical table. This gave our "celebrated sa- 
vant" an opportunity to show off his skill. With great 
pomp and solemnity he set to "work." Alas and alack, 
the "savant" did not know even the ABC of anatomy 
and was entirely at a loss as to how the parts should 
be put together so as to produce a complete skeleton! 



* We are referring here to Sakartvelo for the sole purpose of 
better explaining the contents of Clause 9. The object of the pres- 
ent article is to criticise the Federalist Social-Democrats, and 
not the Sakartvelo-ists, who differ radically from the former (see 
Chapter I. 



THE SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC VIEW OF THE NATIONAL QUESTION 47 

The poor fellow busied himself for a long time, perspired 
copiously, but all in vain! Finally, when nothing had 
come of all his efforts and he had got everything mixed 
up, he seized several parts of the skeleton, flung them into 
a far corner of the room and vented his philosophic ire 
on certain "evil-minded" persons, who, he alleged, had 
placed spurious parts of a skeleton on his table. Natu- 
rally, the spectators made fun of this "learned anato- 
mist." 

A similar "misadventure" has befallen Sakartvelo. 
It took it into its head to analyse our Party programme; 
but it turns out that Sakartvelo has no idea of what 
our programme is, nor of how it ought to be analysed; it 
has not grasped the connection that exists between the 
various clauses of this programme or the significance of 
each clause. So it "philosophically" gives us the follow- 
ing advice: I cannot understand such and such clauses 
of your programme, therefore (?!) they must be deleted. 

But I do not want to make fun of Sakartvelo, which 
is a laughing-stock already; as the saying goes: don't 
hit a man when he is down! On the contrary, I am even 
prepared to help it and explain our programme to it, but 
on condition that 1) it confesses its ignorance, 2) listens 
to me with attention, and 3) keeps on good terms with 
logic* 

The point is as follows. Clauses 3, 7 and 8 of our 
programme arose out of the idea oi political centralism. 



* I deem it necessary to inform the readers that from its very 
first issues Sakartvelo declared war upon logic as fetters which 
must be combated. No attention need be paid to the fact that 
Sakartvelo often speaks in the name of logic; it does so only because 
of its characteristic levity and forgetfulness. 



48 J. V. S T A L I N 



When inserting these clauses in its programme the Russian 
Social-Democratic Labour Party was guided by the 
consideration that what is called the "final" solution of 
the "national question," i.e., the "emancipation" of the 
"alien" nationalities in Russia, is, speaking generally, 
impossible so long as the bourgeoisie retains political 
power. There are two reasons for this: first, present-day 
economic development is gradually building a bridge 
between the "alien nationalities" and "Russia," it is 
creating increasing intercourse between them, and there- 
by engendering friendly feeling among the leading 
circles of the bourgeoisie of these nationalities, thus 
removing the ground for their "national-emancipation" 
aspirations; second, speaking generally, the proletariat 
will not support the so-called "national-emancipation" 
movement, for up till now, every such movement has 
been conducted in the interests of the bourgeoisie, and 
has corrupted and crippled the class consciousness of 
the proletariat. These considerations gave rise to the idea 
of political centralism, on which Clauses 3, 7 and 8 of 
our Party programme are based. 

But this, as has been said above, is the general view. 

It does not, however, preclude the possibility that 
economic and political conditions may arise under which 
the advanced bourgeois circles among the "alien" na- 
tionalities will want "national emancipation." 

It may also happen that such a movement will prove 
to be favourable for the development of the class con- 
sciousness of the proletariat. 

How should our Party act in such cases? 

It is precisely with such possible cases in view that 
Clause 9 was included in our programme; it is precisely in 



THE SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC VIEW OF THE NATIONAL QUESTION 49 

anticipation of such possible circumstances that the na- 
tionalities are accorded a right which will prompt them 
to strive to arrange their national affairs in accordance 
with their own wishes (for instance, to "emancipate 
themselves" completely, to secede). 

Our Party, the party whose aim is to lead the mili- 
tant proletariat of the whole of Russia, must be prepared 
for such contingencies in the life of the proletariat 
and, accordingly, had to insert such a clause in its 
programme. 

That is how every prudent, far-sighted party ought 
to act. 

It seems, however, that this interpretation of 
Clause 9 fails to satisfy the "savants" of Sakartvelo, and 
also some of the Federalist Social-Democrats. They de- 
mand a "precise" and "straightforward" answer to the 
question: is "national independence" advantageous or dis- 
advantageous to the proletariat?* 

This reminds me of the Russian metaphysicians of 
the fifties of the last century who pestered the dialecti- 
cians of those days with the question: is rain good or bad 
for the crops? and demanded a "precise" answer. It was 
not difficult for the dialecticians to prove that this 
way of presenting the question was totally unscientific; 
that such questions must be answered differently at dif- 
ferent times; that during a drought rain is beneficial, 
whereas in a rainy season more rain is useless and even 
harmful; and that, consequently, to demand a "precise" 
answer to such a question is obviously stupid. 



* See the article by "Old (i.e., old-fashioned!) Revolution- 
ary" in Sakartvelo, No. 9. 



50 J. V. S T A L I N 



But Sakartvelo has learned nothing from such ex- 
amples. 

Bernstein's followers demanded of the Marxists an 
equally "precise" answer to the question: are co-opera- 
tives (i.e., consumers' and producers' co-operative socie- 
ties) useful or harmful to the proletariat? It was not 
difficult for the Marxists to prove that this way of pre- 
senting the question was pointless; they explained very 
simply that everything depends on time and place; that 
where the class consciousness of the proletariat has 
reached the proper level of development and the proletar- 
ians are united in a single, strong political party, co- 
operatives may be of great benefit to the proletariat, 
if the party itself undertakes to organise and direct 
them. On the other hand, where these conditions 
are lacking, the co-operatives are harmful to the pro- 
letariat, for they breed small-shopkeeper tendencies 
and craft insularity among the workers, and thereby 
corrupt their class consciousness. 

But the Sakartvelo-'\?,is have learned nothing even 
from this example. They demand more insistently than 
ever: is national independence useful or harmful to the 
proletariat? Give us a precise answer! 

But we see that the circumstances which may give 
rise to and develop a "national-emancipation" movement 
among the bourgeoisie of the "alien" nationalities do 
not yet exist, nor, for that matter, are they really in- 
evitable in the future — we have only assumed them as a 
possibility. Furthermore, it is impossible to tell at pres- 
ent what the level of the class consciousness of the 
proletariat will be at that particular moment, and to 
what extent this movement will then be useful or harm- 



THE SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC VIEW OF THE NATIONAL QUESTION 51 

ful to the proletariat! Hence, we may ask, on what basis 
can one build* a "precise" answer to this question? 
From what premises can it be deduced? And is it not 
stupid to demand a "precise" answer under such circum- 
stances? 

Obviously, we must leave it to the "alien" nationali- 
ties to decide that question themselves; our task is to 
win for them the right to do so. Let the nationalities 
themselves decide, when this question faces them, wheth- 
er "national independence" is useful or harmful to 
them, and, if useful — in what form to exercise it. They 
alone can decide this question! 

Thus, Clause 9 grants the "alien" nationalities the 
right to arrange their national affairs in accordance 
with their own wishes. And that same clause imposes 
on us the duty to see to it that the wishes of these na- 
tionalities are really Social-Democratic, that these wishes 
spring from the class interests of the proletariat; and 
for this we must educate the proletarians of these na- 
tionalities in the Social-Democratic spirit, subject some 
of their reactionary "national" habits, customs and 
institutions to stern Social-Democratic criticism — which, 
however, will not prevent us from defending these habits, 
customs and institutions against police violence. 

Such is the underlying idea of Clause 9. 

It is easy to see what a profound logical connection 
there is between this clause of our programme and the 
principles of the proletarian class struggle. And since our 



* Messrs. the Sakartvelo-ists always build their demands on 
sand and cannot conceive of people who are capable of finding 
firmer ground for their demands! 



52 J. V. S T A L I N 



entire programme is built on these principles, the logical 
connection between Clause 9 and all the other clauses 
of our Party programme is self-evident. 

It is precisely because dull-witted Sakartvelo can- 
not assimilate such simple ideas that it is styled a "wise" 
organ of the press. 

What else remains of the "national question"? 

5) ""Defence of the national spirit and its attributes?" 

But what is this "national spirit and its attributes"? 
Science, through the medium of dialectical materialism, 
proved long ago that there is no such thing as a "na- 
tional spirit" and that there cannot be. Has anyone re- 
futed this view of dialectical materialism? History tells 
us that no one has refuted it. Hence, we must agree with 
this view of science, and, together with science, reiterate 
that there is no such thing as a "national spirit," nor 
can there be. And since this is the case, since there is 
no such thing as a "national spirit," it is self-evident 
that defence of what does not exist is a logical absurdity, 
which must inevitably lead to corresponding histor- 
ical (undesirable) consequences. It is becoming only 
for Sakartvelo — "organ of the revolutionary party of 
Georgian Social-Federalists" (see Sakartvelo, No. 9)* to 
utter such "philosophical" absurdities. 

* * 

* 



* What is this "party," which bears such a strange name? 
Sakartvelo informs us (see Supplement No. 1 to Sakartvelo, No. 10) 
that "in the spring of this year Georgian revolutionaries: Georgian 
Anarchists, supporters of Sakartvelo, Georgian Social-Revolution- 
aries, gathered abroad and . . . united ... in a 'party' of Geor- 



THE SOCIAL-DEMOCRATIC VIEW OF THE NATIONAL QUESTION 53 

That is how matters stand with the national question. 

As is evident, our Party divided this question into 
several parts, distilled its vital juices from it, injected 
them into the veins of its programme, and thereby showed 
how the "national question" should be solved in the 



gian Social-Federalists.". . . Yes, Anarchists, who despise all 
politics heart and soul, Social-Revolutionaries who worship poli- 
tics, and the Sakartvelo-ists, who repudiate all terrorist and anarch- 
ist measures — and it turns out that this motley and mutually- 
negating crowd united to form ... a "party"! As ideal a patch- 
work as anyone could ever imagine! Here's a place where one 
won't find it dull! Those organisers who assert that people must 
have common principles in order to unite in a party are mistaken! 
Not common principles, but absence of principles is the basis on 
which a "party" must be built, says this motley crowd. Down 
with "theory" and principles — they are only slaves' fetters! The 
sooner we free ourselves of them the better — philosophises this 
motley crowd. And, indeed, the moment these people freed them- 
selves of principles they forthwith, at one stroke, built ... a 
house of cards — I beg your pardon — the "party of Georgian Social- 
Federalists." So it turns out that "seven men and a boy" can 
form a "party" at any time, whenever they get together. Can 
one refrain from laughing when these ignoramuses, these "offi- 
cers" without an army, philosophise like this: the Russian Social- 
Democratic Labour Party "is anti-socialist, reactionary," etc.; 
the Russian Social-Democrats are "chauvinists"; the Caucasian 
Union of our party "slavishly" submits to the Central Committee of 
the Party,* etc. (see the resolutions of the First Conference of the 
Georgian Revolutionaries). Nothing better could be expected of 
the archeological fossils of the Bakunin era: the fruit is typical 
of the tree that bore it, goods are typical of the factory that pro- 
duced them. 

* I must observe that some abnormal "individuals" regard the co-or- 
dinated action of the various sections of our Party as "slavish submis- 
sion." It is all due to weak nerves, the physicians say. 



54 J. V. S T A L I N 



Social-Democratic movement in such a way as to destroy 
national barriers to their foundations, while not depart- 
ing from our principles for a moment. 

The question is: Where is the need for separate 
national parties? Or, where is the Social-Democratic 
"basis," on which the organisational and political views 
of the Federalist Social-Democrats are supposed to be 
built? No such "basis" is to be seen — it does not exist. 
The Federalist Social-Democrats are floating in mid-air. 

They have two ways of getting out of this uncomfort- 
able position. Either they must entirely abandon the 
standpoint of the revolutionary proletariat and accept 
the principle of reinforcing the national barriers (oppor- 
tunism in the shape of federalism); or they must re- 
nounce all federalism in party organisation, boldly raise 
the banner of demolition of national barriers, and rally 
to the united camp of the Russian Social-Democratic 
Labour Party. 

Proletarians Brdzola 

(The Proletarian Struggle), No. 7 

September 1, 1904 



Unsigned 

Translated from the Georgian 



A LETTER FROM KUTAIS' 



What we need here now is Iskra^° (although it has 
no sparks, we need it: at all events it contains news, 
the devil take it, and we must thoroughly know the ene- 
my), beginning with No. 63. We very much need Bonch- 
Bruyevich's" publications: The Fight for the Congress, 
To the Party (isn't this the Declaration of the 22?'^), Our 
Misunderstandings , on the quintessence of socialism and on 
strikes by Ryadovoi (if issued), Lenin's pamphlet against 
Rosa and Kautsky,'^ Minutes of the Congress of the 
League, '"^ One Step Forward^^ (this can be put aside if 
you can't send it now). We need everything new that's 
published, from simple declarations to large pamphlets, 
which in any way deals with the struggle now going on 
within the Party. 

I have read Galyorka's pamphlet Down With Bona- 
partism. It's not bad. It would have been better had he 
struck harder and deeper with his hammer. His jocular 
tone and pleas for mercy' rob his blows of strength and 
weight, and spoil the reader's impression. These defects 
are all the more glaring for the reason that the author evi- 
dently understands our position well, and explains and 
elaborates certain questions excellently. A man who 
takes up our position must speak with a firm and 



56 J. V. S TALI N 



determined voice. In this respect Lenin is a real moun- 
tain eagle. 

I have also read Plekhanov's articles in which he 
analyses What Is To Be Done?^^ This man has either gone 
quite off his head, or else is moved by hatred and enmity. 
I think both causes operate. I think that Plekhanov has 
fallen behind the new problems. He imagines he has the 
old opponents before him, and he goes on repeating in 
the old way: "social consciousness is determined by 
social being," "ideas do not drop from the skies." As 
if Lenin said that Marx's socialism would have been 
possible under slavery and serfdom. Even schoolboys 
know now that "ideas do not drop from the skies." 
The point is, however, that we are now faced with quite 
a different issue. We assimilated this general formula 
long ago and the time has now come to analyse this gener- 
al problem. What interests us now is how separate ideas 
are worked up into a system of ideas (the theory of so- 
cialism), how separate ideas, and hints of ideas, link up 
into one harmonious system — the theory of socialism, 
and who works and links them up. Do the masses give 
their leaders a programme and the principles underlying 
the programme, or do the leaders give these to the masses? 
If the masses themselves and their spontaneous movement 
give us the theory of socialism, then there is no need 
to take the trouble to safeguard the masses from the per- 
nicious influence of revisionism, terrorism, Zubatovism 
and anarchism: "the spontaneous movement engenders 
socialism /row itself.'" If the spontaneous movement 
does not engender the theory of socialism from itself 
(don't forget that Lenin is discussing the theory of 
socialism), then the latter is engendered outside o/ the 



A LETTER FROM KUTAIS 57 

spontaneous movement, from the observations and study 
of the spontaneous movement by men who are equipped 
with up-to-date knowledge. Hence, the theory of social- 
ism is worked out "quite independently of the growth 
of the spontaneous movement," in spite of that move- 
ment in fact, and is then introduced into that movement 
from outside, correcting it in conformity with its content, 
i.e., in conformity with the objective requirements of 
the proletarian class struggle. 

The conclusion (practical deduction) to be drawn from 
this is as follows: we must raise the proletariat to a 
consciousness of its true class interests, to a conscious- 
ness of the socialist ideal, and not break this ideal up 
into small change, or adjust it to the spontaneous move- 
ment. Lenin has laid down the theoretical basis on which 
this practical deduction is built. It is enough to accept 
this theoretical premise and no opportunism will get 
anywhere near you. Herein lies the significance of Lenin's 
idea. I call it Lenin's, because nobody in Russian 
literature has expressed it with such clarity as Lenin. 
Plekhanov believes that he is still living in the nine- 
ties, and he goes on chewing what has already been 
chewed eighteen times over — twice two make four. And 
he is not ashamed of having talked himself into 
repeating Martynov's ideas. . . . 

You are no doubt familiar with the Declaration of 
the 22. . . . There was a comrade here from your parts 
who took with him the resolutions of the Caucasian 
Committees in favour of calling a special congress of the 
Party. 

You are wrong in thinking that the situation is hope- 
less — only the Kutais Committee wavered, but I 



58 J. V. S T A L I N 



succeeded in convincing them, and after that they began 
to swear by Bolshevism. It was not difficult to convince 
them: the two-faced policy of the Central Committee 
became obvious thanks to the Declaration, and after 
fresh news was received, there could be no further doubt 
about it. It (the C.C.) will break its neck, the local and 
Russian comrades will see to that. It has got everybody's 
back up. 

Written in September-October 1904 
Published for the first time 



Translated from the Georgian 



A LETTER FROM KUTAIS 

(From the Same Comrade) 



I am late with this letter, don't be angry. I have been 
busy all the time. All that you sent I have received (Min- 
utes of the League; Our Misunderstandings by Galyorka 
and Ryadovoi; Sotsial-Demokrat, No 1; Iskra, the last 
issues). I liked Ryadovoi's idea ("A Conclusion"). The 
article against Rosa Luxemburg is also good. These 
ladies and gentlemen — Rosa, Kautsky, Plekhanov, Axel- 
rod, Vera Zasulich and the others, being old acquaint- 
ances, have evidently worked out some kind of family 
tradition. They cannot "betray" one another; they defend 
one another as the members of a clan in a patriarchal 
tribe used to defend one another without going into 
the guilt or innocence of the kinsman. It is this family 
feeling, this feeling of "kinship" that has prevented 
Rosa from studying the crisis in the Party objectively 
(of course, there are other reasons, for example, in- 
adequate knowledge of the facts, foreign spectacles, 
etc.). Incidentally, this explains certain unseemly ac- 
tions on the part of Plekhanov, Kautsky and others. 

Everybody here likes Bonch's publications as mas- 
terly expositions of the Bolsheviks' position. Galyorka 



60 J. V. S T A L I N 



would have done well if he had dealt with the substance 
of Plekhanov's articles (Iskra, Nos. 70, 71). The fun- 
damental idea in Galyorka's articles is that Plekhanov 
once said one thing and is now saying another, that he 
is contradicting himself. How very important! As if 
this were new! This is not the first time he is contradict- 
ing himself. He may even be proud of it and regard 
himself as the living embodiment of the "dialectical 
process." It goes without saying that inconsistency is 
a blotch on the political physiognomy of a "leader," and 
it (the blotch) should undoubtedly be noted. But that 
is not what we are discussing (in Nos. 70, 71); we are 
discussing an important question of theory (the ques- 
tion of the relation between being and consciousness) 
and of tactics (the relation between the led and the lead- 
ers). In my opinion, Galyorka should have shown that Ple- 
khanov's theoretical war against Lenin is quixotic to the 
utmost degree, tilting at windmills, for in his pamphlet 
Lenin, with the utmost consistency, adheres to K. Marx's 
proposition concerning the origin of consciousness. And 
Plekhanov's war on the question of tactics is a manifes- 
tation of utter confusion, characteristic of the "indivi- 
dual" who is passing over to the camp of the opportu- 
nists. Had Plekhanov formulated the question clearly, 
for example, in the following shape: "who formulates 
the programme, the leaders or the led?" or: "who raises 
whom to an understanding of the programme, the leaders 
the led, or vice versa?" or: "perhaps it is undesirable 
that the leaders should raise the masses to an understand- 
ing of the programme, tactics and principles of organi- 
sation?" The simplicity and tautology of these ques- 
tions provide their own solution, and had Plekhanov put 



A LETTER FROM KUTAIS 61 

them to himself as clearly as this, he, perhaps, would 
have been deterred from his intention and would 
not have come out against Lenin with such fire- 
works. But since Plekhanov did not do that, i.e., since 
he confused the issue with phrases about "heroes 
and the mob," he digressed in the direction of tactical 
opportunism. To confuse the issue is characteristic of 
opportunists. 

Had Galyorka dealt with the substance of these and 
similar questions he would have done much better, in my 
opinion. Perhaps you will say that this is Lenin's business; 
but I cannot agree with this, because the views of Lenin 
that are criticised are not Lenin's private property, and 
their misinterpretation is a matter that concerns other 
members of the Party no less than Lenin. Lenin, of 
course, could perform this task better than anybody 
else. . . . 

We already have resolutions in favour of Bonch's 
publications. Perhaps we shall have the money too. You 
have probably read the resolutions "in favour of peace" 
in No. 74 oilskra. The resolutions passed by the Imeretia- 
Mingrelia and Baku Committees were not mentioned, be- 
cause they said nothing about "confidence" in the C.C. 
The September resolutions, as I wrote you, insistently 
demanded the convocation of the congress. We shall 
see what happens, i.e., we shall see what the results of the 
meetings of the Party Council" show. Have you received 
the six rubles? You will receive some more within the 
next few days. Don't forget to send with that fellow 
the pamphlet A Letter to a Comrade^^ — many here have 
not yet read it. Send also the next number of the Sotsial- 
Demokrat. 



62 J. V. S T A L I N 



Kostrov''' has sent us another letter in which he talks 
about the spiritual and the material (one would think 
he was talking about cotton material). That ass doesn't 
realise that his audience are not the readers of Kvali}^ 
What does he care about organisational questions? 

A new issue (the 7th) of The Proletarian Struggle 
{Proletariatis BrdzolaY^ has appeared. Incidentally, it 
contains an article of mine against organisational and 
political federalism. ^^ I'll send you a copy if I can. 

Written in October 1904 
Published for the first time 



Translated from the Georgian 



THE PROLETARIAN CLASS 
AND THE PROLETARL^V PARTY 

{Concerning Paragraph One of the Party Rules) 



The time when people boldly proclaimed "Russia, 
one and indivisible," has gone. Today even a child knows 
that there is no such thing as Russia "one and indivisi- 
ble," that Russia long ago split up into two opposite 
classes, the bourgeoisie and the proletariat. Today it 
is no secret to anyone that the struggle between these 
two classes has become the axis around which our con- 
temporary life revolves. 

Nevertheless, until recently it was difficult to notice 
all this, the reason being that hitherto we saw only in- 
dividual groups in the arena of the struggle, for it was 
only individual groups in individual towns and parts 
of the country that waged the struggle, while the prole- 
tariat and the bourgeoisie, as classes, were not easily 
discernible. But now towns and districts have united, 
various groups of the proletariat have joined hands, 
joint strikes and demonstrations have broken out — and 
before us has unfolded the magnificent picture of the 
struggle between the two Russias — bourgeois Russia 
and proletarian Russia. Two big armies have entered 
the arena — the army of proletarians and the army of 



64 J. V. S T A L I N 



the bourgeoisie — and the struggle between these two 
armies embraces the whole of our social life. 

Since an army cannot operate without leaders, and 
since every army has a vanguard which marches at its 
head and lights up its path, it is obvious that with 
these armies there had to appear corresponding groups 
of leaders, corresponding parties, as they are usually 
called. 

Thus, the picture presents the following scene: on 
one side there is the bourgeois army, headed by the lib- 
eral party; on the other, there is the proletarian army, 
headed by the Social-Democratic Party; each army, in 
its class struggle, is led by its own party.* 

We have mentioned all this in order to compare 
the proletarian party with the proletarian class and 
thus briefly to bring out the general features of the 
Party. 

The foregoing makes it sufficiently clear that the 
proletarian party, being a fighting group of leaders, must, 
firstly, be considerably smaller than the proletarian class 
with respect to membership; secondly, it must be supe- 
rior to the proletarian class with respect to its understand- 
ing and its experience; and, thirdly, it must be a 
united organisation. 

In our opinion, what has been said needs no proof, 
for it is self-evident that, so long as the capitalist system 
exists, with its inevitably attendant poverty and back- 
wardness of the masses, the proletariat as a whole cannot 
rise to the desired level of class consciousness, and. 



* We do not mention the other parties in Russia, because 
there is no need to deal with them in examining the questions 
under discussion. 



THE PROLETARIAN CLASS AND THE PROLETARIAN PARTY 65 

consequently, there must be a group of class-conscious 
leaders to enlighten the proletarian army in the spirit 
of socialism, to unite and lead it in its struggle. It is 
also clear that a party which has set out to lead the fight- 
ing proletariat must not be a chance conglomeration of 
individuals, but a united centralised organisation, so 
that its activities can be directed according to a single 
plan. 

Such, in brief, are the general features of our Party, 

Bearing all this in mind, let us pass to the main ques- 
tion: Whom can we call a Party member? Paragraph 
One of the Party Rules, which is the subject of the 
present article, deals with precisely this question. 

And so, let us examine this question. 

Whom, then, can we call a member of the Russian 
Social-Democratic Labour Party — i.e., what are the 
duties of a Party member? 

Our Party is a Social-Democratic Party. This means 
that it has its own programme (the immediate and the 
ultimate aims of the movement), its own tactics (methods 
of struggle), and its own organisational principle (form of 
association). Unity of programmatic, tactical and organ- 
isational views is the basis on which our Party is built. 
Only the unity of these views can unite the Party mem- 
bers in one centralised party. If unity of views collapses, 
the Party collapses. Consequently, only one who fully 
accepts the Party's programme, tactics and organisational 
principle can be called a Party member. Only one who 
has adequately studied and has fully accepted our Party's 
programmatic, tactical and organisational views can be in 
the ranks of our Party and, thereby, in the ranks of 
the leaders of the proletarian army. 



66 J. V. S T A L I N 



But is it enough for a Party member merely to accept 
the Party's programme, tactics and organisational views? 
Can a person like that be regarded as a true leader of the 
proletarian army? Of course not! In the first place, every- 
body knows that there are plenty of windbags in the 
world who would readily "accept" the Party's programme, 
tactics and organisational views, but who are incapable 
of being anything else than windbags. It would be a 
desecration of the Party's Holy of Holies to call a wind- 
bag like that a Party member (i.e., a leader of the pro- 
letarian army)! Moreover, our Party is not a school of 
philosophy or a religious sect. Is not our Party a fighting 
party? Since it is, is it not self-evident that our Party 
will not be satisfied with a platonic acceptance of its 
programme, tactics and organisational views, that it will 
undoubtedly demand that its members should apply 
the views they have accepted? Hence, whoever wants 
to be a member of our Party cannot rest content with 
merely accepting our Party's programmatic, tactical and 
organisational views, but must set about applying these 
views, putting them into effect. 

But what does applying the Party's views mean for 
a Party member? When can he apply these views? Only 
when he is fighting, when he is marching with the whole 
Party at the head of the proletarian army. Can the 
struggle be waged by solitary, scattered individuals? 
Certainly not! On the contrary, people first unite, first 
they organise, and only then do they go into battle. If 
that is not done, all struggle is fruitless. Clearly, then, 
the Party members, too, will be able to fight and, conse- 
quently, apply the Party's views, only if they unite in 
a compact organisation. It is also clear that the more 



THE PROLETARIAN CLASS AND THE PROLETARIAN PARTY 67 

compact the organisation in which the Party members 
unite, the better will they be able to fight, and, conse- 
quently, the more fully will they apply the Party's 
programme, tactics and organisational views. It is not for 
nothing that our Party is called an organisation of leaders 
and not a conglomeration of individuals. And, if our 
Party is an organisation of leaders, it is obvious that only 
those can be regarded as members of this Party, of this 
organisation, who work in this organisation and, there- 
fore, deem it their duty to merge their wishes with 
the wishes of the Party and to act in unison with the 
Party. 

Hence, to be a Party member one must apply the 
Party's programme, tactics and organisational views; to 
apply the Party's views one must fight for them; and to 
fight for these views one must work in a Party organisa- 
tion, work in unison with the Party. Clearly, to be a 
Party member one must belong to one of the Party organ- 
isations.* Only when we join one of the Party organi- 
sations and thus merge our personal interests with the 
Party's interests can we become Party members, and, 
consequently, real leaders of the proletarian army. 

If our Party is not a conglomeration of individual 



* Just as every complex organism is made up of an incalcu- 
lable number of extremely simple organisms, so our Party, being a 
complex and general organisation, is made up of numerous dis- 
trict and local bodies called Party organisations, provided they have 
been endorsed by the Party congress or the Central Committee. 
As you see, not only committees are called Party organisations. 
To direct the activities of these organisations according to a single 
plan there is a Central Committee, through which these local 
Party organisations constitute one large centralised organi- 
sation. 



68 J. V. S T A L I N 



windbags, but an organisation of leaders which, through 
its Central Committee, is worthily leading the proletar- 
ian army forward, then all that has been said above is 
self-evident. 

The following must also be noted. 

Up till now our Party has resembled a hospitable 
patriarchal family, ready to take in all who sympathise. 
But now that our Party has become a centralised organ- 
isation, it has thrown off its patriarchal aspect and 
has become in all respects like a fortress, the gates of 
which are opened only to those who are worthy. And 
that is of great importance to us. At a time when the 
autocracy is trying to corrupt the class consciousness 
of the proletariat with "trade unionism," nationalism, 
clericalism and the like, and when, on the other hand, 
the liberal intelligentsia is persistently striving to kill 
the political independence of the proletariat and to 
impose its tutelage upon it — at such a time we must be 
extremely vigilant and never forget that our Party is 
a fortress, the gates of which are opened only to those 
who have been tested. 

We have ascertained two essential conditions of 
Party membership (acceptance of the programme and 
work in a Party organisation). If to these we add a 
third condition, namely, that a Party member must 
render the Party financial support, then we shall have 
all the conditions that give one right to the title of 
Party member. 

Hence, a member of the Russian Social-Democratic 
Labour Party is one who accepts the programme of this 
Party, renders the Party financial support, and works 
in one of the Party organisations. 



THE PROLETARIAN CLASS AND THE PROLETARIAN PARTY 69 

That is how Paragraph One of the Party Rules, 
drafted by Comrade Lenin,* was formulated. 

The formula, as you see, springs entirely from the 
view that our Party is a centralised organisation and not 
a conglomeration of individuals. 

Therein lies the supreme merit of this formula. 

But it appears that some comrades reject Lenin's 
formula on the grounds that it is "narrow" and "incon- 
venient," and propose their own formula, which, it must 
be supposed, is neither "narrow" nor "inconvenient." 
We are referring to Martov's** formula, which we shall 
now analyse. 

Martov's formula is: "A member of the R.S.D.L.P. 
is one who accepts its programme, supports the Party 
financially and renders it regular personal assistance 
under the direction of one of its organisations." As you see, 
this formula omits the third essential condition of Party 
membership, namely, the duty of Party members to 
work in one of the Party organisations. It appears that 
Martov regards this definite and essential condition as 
superfluous, and in his formula he has substituted for 
it the nebulous and dubious "personal assistance under 
the direction of one of the Party organisations." It ap- 
pears, then, that one can be a member of the Party without 
belonging to any Party organisation (a fine "party," 
to be sure!) and without feeling obliged to submit to 
the Party's will (fine "Party discipline," to be sure!). 
Well, and how can the Party "regularly" direct persons 



* Lenin is the outstanding theoretician and practical leader 
of revolutionary Social-Democracy. 

** Martov is one of the editors of Iskra. 



70 J. V. S T A L I N 



who do not belong to any Party organisation and, conse- 
quently, do not feel absolutely obliged to submit to 
Party discipline? 

That is the question that shatters Martov's formula 
of Paragraph One of the Party Rules, and it is answered in 
masterly fashion in Lenin's formula, inasmuch as the 
latter definitely stipulates that a third and indispensable 
condition of Party membership is that one must work 
in a Party organisation. 

All we have to do is to throw out of Martov's formula 
the nebulous and meaningless "personal assistance un- 
der the direction of one of the Party organisations." 
With this condition eliminated, there remain only two 
conditions in Martov's formula (acceptance of the pro- 
gramme and financial support), which, by themselves, are 
utterly worthless, since every windbag can "accept" the 
Party programme and support the Party financially — but 
that does not in the least entitle him to Party member- 
ship. 

A "convenient" formula, we must say! 

We say that real Party members cannot possibly 
rest content with merely accepting the Party programme, 
but must without fail strive to apply the programme they 
have accepted. Martov answers: You are too strict, for 
it is not so very necessary for a Party member to apply 
the programme he has accepted, once he is willing to 
render the Party financial support, and so forth. It looks 
as though Martov is sorry for certain windbag "Social- 
Democrats" and does not want to close the Party's doors 
to them. 

We say, further, that inasmuch as the application of 
the programme entails fighting, and that it is impossible 



THE PROLETARIAN CLASS AND THE PROLETARIAN PARTY 71 

to fight without unity, it is the duty of every prospective 
Party member to join one of the Party organisations, 
merge his wishes with those of the Party and, in unison 
with the Party, lead the fighting proletarian army, i.e., 
he must organise in the well-formed detachments of a 
centralised party. To this Martov answers: It is not so 
very necessary for Party members to organise in well- 
formed detachments, to unite in organisations; fighting 
single-handed is good enough. 

What, then, is our Party? we ask. A chance conglomer- 
ation of individuals, or a united organisation of lead- 
ers? And if it is an organisation of leaders, can we 
regard as a member one who does not belong to it and, 
consequently, does not consider it his bounden duty to 
submit to its discipline? Martov answers that the 
Party is not an organisation, or, rather, that the Party 
is an unorganised organisation (fine "centralism," to 
be sure!)! 

Evidently, in Martov's opinion, our Party is not a 
centralised organisation, but a conglomeration of local 
organisations and individual "Social-Democrats" who 
have accepted our Party programme, etc. But if our Party 
is not a centralised organisation it will not be a fortress, 
the gates of which can be opened only for those who have 
been tested. And, indeed, to Martov, as is evident from 
his formula, the Party is not a fortress but a banquet, 
which every sympathiser can freely attend. A little knowl- 
edge, an equal amount of sympathy, a little financial 
support and there you are — you have full right to count 
as a Party member. Don't listen — cries Martov to cheer 
up the frightened "Party members" — don't listen to 
those people who maintain that a Party member must 



72 J. V. S T A L I N 



belong to one of the Party organisations and thus sub- 
ordinate his wishes to the wishes of the Party. In the 
first place, it is hard for a man to accept these condi- 
tions; it is no joke to subordinate one's wishes to those 
of the Party! And, secondly, as I have already pointed 
out in my explanation, the opinion of those people is 
mistaken. And so, gentlemen, you are welcome to . . . 
the banquet! 

It looks as though Martov is sorry for certain profes- 
sors and high-school students who are loth to subordinate 
their wishes to the wishes of the Party, and so he is forc- 
ing a breach in our Party fortress through which these 
estimable gentlemen may smuggle into our Party. He 
is opening the door to opportunism, and this at a time 
when thousands of enemies are assailing the class con- 
sciousness of the proletariat! 

But that is not all. The point is that Martov's 
dubious formula makes it possible for opportunism to 
arise in our Party from another side. 

Martov's formula, as we know, refers only to the ac- 
ceptance of the programme; about tactics and organisation 
it contains not a word; and yet, unity of organisational 
and tactical views is no less essential for Party unity than 
unity of programmatic views. We may be told that noth- 
ing is said about this even in Comrade Lenin's formula. 
True, but there is no need to say anything about it in Com- 
rade Lenin's formula. Is it not self-evident that one who 
works in a Party organisation and, consequently, fights 
in unison with the Party and submits to Party discipline, 
cannot pursue tactics and organisational principles 
other than the Party's tactics and the Party's organisa- 
tional principles? But what would you say of a "Party 



THE PROLETARIAN CLASS AND THE PROLETARIAN PARTY 73 

member" who has accepted the Party programme, but 
does not belong to any Party organisation? What guaran- 
tee is there that such a "member's" tactics and organisa- 
tional views will be those of the Party and not some 
other? That is what Martov's formula fails to explain! 
As a result of Martov's formula we would have a queer 
"party," whose "members" subscribe to the same pro- 
gramme (and that is questionable!), but differ in their tac- 
tical and organisational views! What ideal variety! In 
what way will our Party differ from a banquet? 

There is just one question we should like to ask: What 
are we to do with the ideological and practical centralism 
that was handed down to us by the Second Party Congress 
and which is radically contradicted by Martov's formula? 
Throw it overboard? If it comes to making a choice, it 
will undoubtedly be more correct to throw Martov's 
formula overboard. 

Such is the absurd formula Martov presents to us 
in opposition to Comrade Lenin's formula! 

We are of the opinion that the decision of the Second 
Party Congress, which adopted Martov's formula, was 
the result of thoughtlessness, and we hope that the Third 
Party Congress will not fail to rectify the blunder of the 
Second Congress and adopt Comrade Lenin's formula. 

We shall briefly recapitulate: The proletarian army 
entered the arena of the struggle. Since every army must 
have a vanguard, this army also had to have such a 
vanguard. Hence the appearance of a group of proletarian 
leaders — the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party. As 
the vanguard of a definite army, this Party must, firstly, 
be armed with its own programme, tactics and organisa- 
tional principle; and, secondly, it must be a united 



74 J. V. S T A L I N 



organisation. To the question — who can be called a mem- 
ber of the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party? — 
this Party can have only one answer: one who accepts 
the Party programme, supports the Party financially and 
works in one of the Party organisations. 

It is this obvious truth that Comrade Lenin has 
expressed in his splendid formula. 

Proletariatis Brdzola 

{The Proletarian Struggle), No. 8, 

January 1, 1905 



Unsigned 

Translated from the Georgian 



WORKERS OF THE CAUCASUS, 
IT IS TIME TO TAKE REVENGE! 



The tsar's battalions are dwindling, the tsar's navy 
is perishing, and now Port Arthur has shamefully surren- 
dered — thus the senile decrepitude of the tsarist autoc- 
racy is once again revealed. . . . 

Inadequate food and the absence of any kind of sani- 
tary measures whatsoever, are causing infectious diseases 
to spread among the troops. These unbearable conditions 
are still further aggravated by the absence of anything 
like decent housing and clothing. Worn and weary, the 
soldiers are dying like flies. And this is after tens of thou- 
sands have been killed by bullets! . . . All this is caus- 
ing unrest and discontent among the troops. The soldiers 
are awakening from their torpor, they are beginning 
to feel that they are human, they no longer blindly obey 
the orders of their superiors, and often greet their upstart 
officers with whistling and threats. 

This is what an officer writes to us from the Far East: 

"I did a foolish thing! On the insistence of my supe- 
rior I recently delivered a speech to the men. No sooner 
did I begin to talk about the necessity of standing fast 
for tsar and country than the air was filled with whistling, 
curses and threats. ... I hastened to put the greatest 
possible distance between myself and the infuriated 
mob. . . ." 



76 J. V. S T A L I N 



Such is the situation in the Far East! 

Add to this the unrest among the reservists in Russia, 
their revolutionary demonstrations in Odessa, Yekateri- 
noslav, Kursk, Penza and other cities, and the protests 
of the new recruits in Guria, Imeretia, Kartalinia and 
in south and north Russia, note that the demonstra- 
tors are undaunted either by prison or bullets (recently, 
in Penza, several reservists were shot for demonstrating), 
and you will easily understand what the Russian soldiers 
are thinking. . . . 

The tsarist autocracy is losing its main prop — its 
"reliable troops"! 

On the other hand, the tsar's treasury is becoming 
more depleted every day. Defeat follows defeat. The 
tsarist government is gradually losing the confidence 
of foreign states. It is barely able to obtain the money 
it needs, and the time is not far distant when it will 
be deprived of all credit! "Who will pay us when you 
are overthrown, and your fall is undoubtedly imminent," 
such is the answer that is given to the utterly discredited 
tsarist government! And the people, the dispossessed, 
starving people, what can they give the tsarist govern- 
ment when they have nothing to eat themselves?! 

And so, the tsarist autocracy is losing its second 
main prop — its rich treasury, and credit which keeps it 
filled! 

Meanwhile, the industrial crisis is becoming more 
acute every day; factories and mills are closing down and 
millions of workers are demanding bread and work. 
Hunger is afflicting the tormented poor of the countryside 
with renewed force. The waves of popular anger rise 
higher and higher and dash against the tsarist throne 



WORKERS OF THE CAUCASUS, IT IS TIME TO TAKE REVENGE! 77 

with increasing force, shaking the decrepit tsarist 
autocracy to its foundations. . . . 

The besieged tsarist autocracy is casting its old skin 
like a snake, and while discontented Russia is preparing 
to launch a decisive assault, it is putting aside (pretending 
to put aside!) its whip and, disguising itself in sheep's 
clothing, is proclaiming & policy of conciliation\ 

Do you hear, comrades? It is asking us to forget 
the swish of whips and the whizz of bullets, the hundreds 
of our hero-comrades who have been killed, their glorious 
shades which are hovering around us and whispering to 
us: "Avenge us!" 

The autocracy is brazenly offering us its blood- 
stained hands and is counselling conciliation ! It has 
published some sort of an "Imperial Ukase"^^ in which 
it promises us some sort of "freedom.". . . The old 
brigands! They think they can feed the millions of starv- 
ing Russian proletarians with words! They hope with 
words to satisfy the many millions of impoverished and 
tormented peasants! With promises they would drown 
the weeping of bereaved families — victims of the war! 
Miserable wretches! They are the drowning clutching at 
a straw! . . . 

Yes, comrades, the throne of the tsarist government 
is being shaken to its foundations! The government 
which is using the taxes it has squeezed out of us to pay 
our executioners — ministers, governors, uyezd chiefs and 
prison chiefs, police officers, gendarmes and spies; the 
government which is compelling the soldiers torn from 
our midst — our brothers and sons — to shed our blood; 
the government which is doing all in its power to support 
the landlords and employers in their daily struggle 



78 J. V. S T A L I N 



against us; the government which has bound us hand 
and foot and has reduced us to the position of rightless 
slaves; the government which has brutally trampled 
upon and mocked at our human dignity — our Holy of 
Holies — it is this government which is tottering and 
feeling the ground slipping from under its feet! 

It is time to take revenge! It is time to avenge our 
valiant comrades who were brutally murdered by the 
tsar's bashi-bazouks in Yaroslavl, Dombrowa, Riga, 
St. Petersburg, Moscow, Batum, Tiflis, Zlatoust, Tikho- 
retskaya, Mikhailovo, Kishinev, Gomel, Yakutsk, Guria, 
Baku and other places! It is time to call the govern- 
ment to book for the tens of thousands of innocent and 
unfortunate men who have perished on the battle-field 
in the Far East. It is time to dry the tears of their wives 
and children! It is time to call the government to book 
for the suffering and humiliation, for the shameful chains 
in which it has kept us for so long! It is time to put 
an end to the tsarist government and to clear the road 
for ourselves to the socialist system! It is time to destroy 
the tsarist government! 

And we will destroy it. 

In vain are Messieurs the Liberals trying to save the 
tottering throne of the tsar! In vain are they stretching 
out a helping hand to the tsar! They are begging for 
charity from him and trying to win his favour for their 
"draft constitution"^"* so as, by means of petty reforms, 
to lay a road for themselves to political domination, to 
transform the tsar into their instrument, to substitute 
the autocracy of the bourgeoisie for the autocracy of 
the tsar and then systematically to strangle the proletar- 
iat and the peasantry! But in vain! It is already too 



WORKERS OF THE CAUCASUS, IT IS TIME TO TAKE REVENGE! 79 

late, Messieurs Liberals! Look around and see what the 
tsarist government has given you, examine its "Imperial 
Ukase": a tiny bit of "freedom" for "rural and urban 
institutions," a tiny "guarantee" against "restriction of 
the rights of private persons," a tiny bit of "freedom" 
of the "printed word" and a big warning about the "un- 
failing preservation of the inviolability of the fundamen- 
tal laws of the empire," about "taking effective measures 
to preserve the full force of the law, a most important 
pillar of the throne in the autocratic state"! . . . Well? 
You had barely time to digest the ridiculous "order" 
of the ridiculous tsar when "warnings" began to pour 
down upon the newspapers like hail, a series of gen- 
darme and police raids commenced, and even peaceful 
banquets were prohibited! The tsarist government itself 
took care to prove that in its miserly promises it would 
go no further than mere words. 

On the other hand, the outraged masses of the people 
are preparing for revolution and not for conciliation with 
the tsar. They stubbornly adhere to the proverb: "Only 
the grave can straighten the hunchback." Yes, gentle- 
men, vain are your efforts! The Russian revolution is 
inevitable. It is as inevitable as the rising of the sun! 
Can you prevent the sun from rising? The main force in 
this revolution is the urban and-rural proletariat, its banner- 
bearer is the Social-Democratic Labour Party, and not 
you. Messieurs Liberals! Why do you forget this obvious 
"trifle"? 

The storm, the harbinger of the dawn, is already ris- 
ing. Only yesterday, or the day before, the proletariat 
of the Caucasus, from Baku to Batum, unanimously 
expressed its contempt for the tsarist autocracy. There 



80 J. V. S T A L I N 



can be no doubt that this glorious effort of the Caucasian 
proletarians will not fail to have its effect on the proletar- 
ians in other parts of Russia. Read also the innumerable 
resolutions passed by workers expressing profound con- 
tempt for the tsarist government, listen to the low but 
powerful murmuring in the countryside — and you will 
convince yourselves that Russia is a loaded gun with 
the hammer cocked ready to go off at the slightest shock. 
Yes, comrades, the time is not far distant when the Rus- 
sian revolution will hoist sail and "sweep from the 
face of the earth" the vile throne of the despicable 
tsar! 

Our vital duty is to be ready for that moment. Let us 
prepare then, comrades! Let us sow the good seed among 
the broad masses of the proletariat. Let us stretch out 
our hands to one another and rally around the Party Com- 
mitteesl We must not forget for a moment that only the 
Party Committees can worthily lead us, only they will light 
up our road to the "promised land" called the social- 
ist world! The party which has opened our eyes and has 
pointed out our enemies to us, which has organised us in 
a formidable army and has led us to fight our foes, which 
has stood by us amidst joy and sorrow and has always 
marched ahead of us — is the Russian Social-Democrat- 
ic Labour Party! It, and it alone, will lead us in 
future ! 

A Constituent Assembly elected on the basis of univer- 
sal, equal, direct and secret suffrage — this is what we must 
fight for now! 

Only such an Assembly will give us the democratic 
republic which we need so urgently in our struggle for 
socialism. 



WORKERS OF THE CAUCASUS, IT IS TIME TO TAKE REVENGE! 81 

Forward then, comrades! When the tsarist autocracy 
is tottering, our duty is to prepare for the decisive 
assault! It is time to take revenge! 

Down With the Tsarist Autocracy! 

Long Live the Popular Constituent Assembly! 

Long Live the Democratic Republic! 

Long Live the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party! 

January 1905 

Reproduced from the manifesto printed 
on January 8, 1905 at tlie underground 
(Aviabar) printing plant of the Caucasian 
Union of the R.S.D.L.P. 

Signed: Union Committee 



LONG LIVE 
INTERNATIONAL FRATERNITY! 



Citizens! The revolutionary proletarian movement 
is growing — and national barriers are collapsing! The 
proletarians of the different nationalities in Russia 
are uniting in a single international army, the individual 
streams of the proletarian movement are merging in one 
general revolutionary flood. The waves of this flood 
are rising higher and higher and dashing against the tsarist 
throne with increasing force — and the decrepit tsarist 
government is tottering. Neither prisons nor penal servi- 
tude, nor gallows — nothing can stop the proletarian 
movement: it is continuously growing! 

And so, to bolster up its throne the tsarist government 
is inventing "new" methods. It is sowing enmity among 
the nationalities of Russia, it is inciting them against 
one another; it is trying to break up the general proletar- 
ian movement into petty movements and to incite them 
against one another; it is organising pogroms against 
the Jews, Armenians, etc. And the purpose of all this 
is to separate the nationalities of Russia from one 
another by means of fratricidal war and, by enfeebling 
them, to vanquish them one by one without dif- 
ficulty! 



LONG LIVE INTERNATIONAL FRATERNITY 83 

Divide and rule — such is the policy of the tsarist 
government. That is what it is doing in the cities of 
Russia (remember the pogroms in Gomel, Kishinev and 
other towns), and it is doing the same in the Caucasus. 
What infamy! It is buttressing its despicable throne with 
the blood and the corpses of citizens! The groans of 
the dying Armenians and Tatars in Baku; the tears 
of wives, mothers and children; the blood, the innocent 
blood of honest but unenlightened citizens; the frightened 
faces of fugitive, defenceless people fleeing from death; 
wrecked homes, looted shops and the frightful, unceas- 
ing whizz of bullets — that is what the tsar — the murder- 
er of honest citizens — is bolstering up his throne with. 

Yes, citizens! It is they, the agents of the tsarist gov- 
ernment, who incited the politically unenlightened among 
the Tatars against the peaceful Armenians! It is they, the 
flunkeys of the tsarist government, who distributed arms 
and ammunition among them, disguised policemen and 
Cossacks in Tatar clothing and hurled them against the 
Armenians! For two months, they — the servants of the 
tsar — prepared this fratricidal war — and at last they 
achieved their barbarous object. Curses and death on 
the head of the tsarist government! 

Now these miserable slaves of the miserable tsar are 
trying to foment a fratricidal war among us, here in 
Tiflis! They are demanding your blood, they want to 
divide and rule over you! But be vigilant, you Arme- 
nians, Tatars, Georgians and Russians! Stretch out your 
hands to one another, unite more closely, and to the at- 
tempts of the government to divide you answer unani- 
mously: Down with the tsarist government! Long live 

the fraternity of the peoples! 



84 J. V. S T A L I N 



Stretch out your hands to one another and, having 
united, rally around the proletariat, the real gravedigger 
of the tsarist government which is the sole culprit in 
the Baku massacres. 

Let your cry be: 

Down With National Strife! 

Down With the Tsarist Government! 

Long Live the Fraternity of the Peoples! 

Long Live the Democratic Republic! 



February 13 , 1905 



Reproduced from the manifesto printed 
at the printing plant of the Tiflis 
Committee of the R.S.D.L.P. 

Signed: Tiflis Committee 



TO CITIZENS 
LONG LIVE THE RED FLAG! 



Great hopes and great disappointment! Instead of 
national enmity — mutual love and confidence! Instead 
of a fratricidal pogrom — a huge demonstration against 
tsarism, the culprit in the pogroms! The hopes of the 
tsarist government have collapsed: the attempt to incite 
the different nationalities in Tiflis against one another 
has failed! . . . 

The tsarist government has long been trying to incite 
the proletarians against one another, has long been 
trying to break up the general proletarian movement. 
That is why it organised the pogroms in Gomel, Ki- 
shinev and other places. It provoked a fratricidal war 
in Baku with the same object. At last, the gaze of the 
tsarist government rested on Tiflis. Here, in the middle 
of the Caucasus, it intended to enact a bloody tragedy 
and then to carry it to the provinces! No small matter: 
to incite the nationalities of the Caucasus against one 
another and to drown the Caucasian proletariat in its 
own blood! The tsarist government rubbed its hands with 
glee. It even distributed a leaflet calling for a massacre 
of Armenians! And it hoped for success. But suddenly. 



86 J. V. S T A L I N 



on February 13, as if to spite the tsarist government, 
a crowd numbering many thousands of Armenians, 
Georgians, Tatars, and Russians assembles in the enclo- 
sure of the Vanque Cathedral and takes a vow of mutual 
support "in the struggle against the devil who is sow- 
ing strife among us." Complete unanimity. Speeches 
are delivered calling for "unity." The masses applaud 
the speakers. Our leaflets are distributed (3,000 copies). 
The masses eagerly take them. The temper of the 
masses rises. In defiance of the government they decide 
to assemble again next day in the enclosure of the same 
cathedral in order once again to "vow to love one 
another." 

February 14. The entire cathedral enclosure and the 
adjacent streets are packed with people. Our leaflets are 
distributed and read quite openly. The crowds split up 
into groups and discuss the contents of the leaflets. 
Speeches are delivered. The temper of the masses rises. 
They decide to march in demonstration past the Zion 
Cathedral and the Mosque, to "vow to love one another," 
to halt at the Persian Cemetery to take the vow once 
again and then disperse. The masses put their decision 
into execution. On the way, near the Mosque and in the 
Persian Cemetery, speeches are delivered and our leaflets 
are distributed (on this day 12,000 were distributed). The 
temper of the masses rises higher and higher. Pent-up 
revolutionary energy breaks through to the surface. The 
masses decide to march in demonstration through Palace 
Street and Golovinsky Prospect and only then to dis- 
perse. Our committee takes advantage of the situation 
and immediately organises a small leading core. This 
core, headed by an advanced worker, takes the central 



TO CITIZENS, LONG LIVE THE RED FLAG! 87 

position — and an improvised red flag flutters right in 
front of the Palace. The banner-bearer, carried shoulder 
high by demonstrators, delivers an emphatically politi- 
cal speech during which he first of all asks the comrades 
not to be dismayed by the absence of a Social-Democratic 
appeal on the flag. "No, no," answer the demonstrators, 
"it is inscribed in our hearts!" He then goes on to explain 
the significance of the Red Flag, criticises the preceding 
speakers from the Social-Democratic viewpoint, exposes 
the half-heartedness of their speeches, urges the necessity 
of abolishing tsarism and capitalism, and calls upon the 
demonstrators to fight under the Red Flag of Social- 
Democracy. "Long live the Red Flag!" the masses shout 
in response. The demonstrators proceed towards the 
Vanque Cathedral. On the way they halt three times to 
listen to the banner-bearer. The latter again calls upon 
the demonstrators to fight against tsarism and urges 
them to take a vow to rise in revolt as unanimously as 
they are demonstrating now. "We swear!" the masses 
shout in response. The demonstrators then reach the 
Vanque Cathedral and after a minor skirmish with Cos- 
sacks, disperse. 

Such was the "demonstration of eight thousand Tiflis 
citizens." 

That is how the citizens of Tiflis retaliated to the 
hypocritical policy of the tsarist government. That is 
how they took revenge on the despicable government 
for the blood of the citizens of Baku. Glory and honour 
to the citizens of Tiflis! 

In face of the thousands of Tiflis citizens who assem- 
bled under the Red Flag and several times pronounced 

sentence of death on the tsarist government, the 



88 J. V. S T A L I N 



despicable flunkeys of the despicable government were 
compelled to retreat. They called off the pogrom. 

But does that mean, citizens, that the tsarist govern- 
ment will not try to organise pogroms in future? Far 
from it! As long as it continues to exist, and the 
more the ground slips from under its feet, the more 
often will it resort to pogroms. The only way to 
eradicate pogroms is to abolish the tsarist autoc- 
racy. 

You cherish your own lives and the lives of your dear 
ones, do you not? You love your friends and kinsmen 
and you want to abolish pogroms, do you not? 
Know then, citizens, that pogroms and the bloodshed 
that accompanies them will be abolished only when 
tsarism is abolished! 

First of all you must strive to overthrow the tsarist 
autocracy! 

You want to abolish all national enmity, do you 
not? You are striving for the complete solidarity of 
peoples, are you not? Know then, citizens, that all 
national strife will be abolished only when inequality 
and capitalism are abolished! 

The ultimate aim of your striving must be — the 
triumph of socialism! 

But who-will sweep the disgusting tsarist regime from 
the face of the earth, who will rid you of pogroms? — The 
proletariat, led by Social-Democracy. 

And who will destroy the capitalist system, who will 
establish international solidarity on earth? — The prole- 
tariat, led by Social-Democracy. 

The proletariat, and only the proletariat, will win 
freedom and peace for you. 



TO CITIZENS, LONG LIVE THE RED FLAG! 89 

Therefore, unite around the proletariat and rally un- 
der the flag of Social-Democracy! 

Rally Under the Red-Flag, Citizens! 
Down With the Tsarist Autocracy! 
Long Live the Democratic Republic! 
Down With Capitalism! 
Long Live Socialism! 
Long Live the Red Flag! 

February 15, 1905 

Reproduced from the manifesto printed 
at the printing plant of the Tiflis 
Committee of the R.S.D.L.P. 

Signed: Tiflis Committee 



BRIEFLY ABOUT DISAGREEMENTS 
IN THE PARTY^^ 



^'Social-Democracy is a combination of 
the working-class movement with social- 
ism." 

Karl Kautsky 

Our "Mensheviks" are really too tiresome! I am re- 
ferring to the Tiflis "Mensheviks." They heard that 
there are disagreements in the Party and so they began 
harping: whether you like it or not we shall talk about 
disagreements, always and everywhere; whether you like 
it or not we shall abuse the "Bolsheviks" right and left! 
And so they are hurling abuse for all they are worth, as 
if they are possessed. At all the crossroads, among them- 
selves and among strangers, in short, wherever they 
happen to be, they howl one thing: beware of the "major- 
ity," they are strangers, infidels! Not content with the 
"habitual" field, they have carried the "case" into the 
legally published literature, thereby proving to the world 
once again . . . how tiresome they are. 

What has the "majority" done? Why is our "minor- 
ity" so "wrathful"? 

Let us turn to history. 



The "majority" and "minority" first came into being 
at the Second Party Congress (1903). That was the con- 
gress at which our scattered forces were to have united 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 91 

in one powerful party. We Party workers placed great 
hopes in that congress. At last! — we exclaimed joy- 
fully — we, too, shall be united in one party, we, too, shall 
be able to work according to a single plan! ... It goes 
without saying that we had been active before that, 
but our activities were scattered and unorganised. It 
goes without saying that we had made attempts to unite 
before that; it was for this purpose that we convened 
the First Party Congress (1898), and it even looked as 
if we had "united," but this unity existed in name 
only: the Party still remained split up into separate 
groups; our forces still remained scattered and had yet 
to be united. And so the Second Party Congress was 
to have mustered our scattered forces and united 
them in one whole. We were to have formed a united 
party. 

Actually it turned out, however, that our hopes had 
been to some degree premature. The congress failed to 
give us a single and indivisible party; it merely laid the 
foundation for such a party. The congress did, however, 
clearly reveal to us that there are two trends within the 
Party: the Iskra trend (I mean the old Iskra),^^ and the 
trend of its opponents. Accordingly, the congress split 
up into two sections: into a "majority" and a "minority." 
The former joined the Iskra trend and rallied around that 
paper; the latter, being opponents of Iskra, took the 
opposite stand. 

Thus, Iskra became the banner of the Party "majori- 
ty," and Iskra' s stand became the stand of the "majority." 

What path did Iskra take? What did it advocate? 

To understand this one must know the conditions 
under which it entered the historical field. 



92 J. V. S T A L I N 



Iskra started publication in December 1900. That was 
the time when a crisis began in Russian industry. The in- 
dustrial boom, which was accompanied by a number of 
economic strikes (1896-98), gradually gave way to a crisis. 
The crisis grew more acute day by day and became an 
obstacle to economic strikes. In spite of that, the work- 
ing-class movement hewed a path for itself and made 
progress; the individual streams merged in a single flood; 
the movement acquired a class aspect and gradually 
took the path of the political struggle. The working- 
class movement grew with astonishing rapidity. . . . But 
there was no sign of an advanced detachment, no Social- 
Democracy* which would have introduced socialist con- 
sciousness into the movement, would have combined it 
with socialism, and, thereby, would have lent the prole- 
tarian struggle a Social-Democratic character. 

What did the "Social-Democrats" of that time (they 
were called "Economists") do? They burned incense to 
the spontaneous movement and light-heartedly reiterated: 
socialist consciousness is not so very necessary for the 
working-class movement, which can very well reach its 
goal without it; the main thing is the movement. The 
movement is everything — consciousness is a mere trifle. 
A movement without socialism — that was what they were 
striving for. 

In that case, what is the mission of Russian Social- 
Democracy? Its mission is to be an obedient tool of the 
spontaneous movement, they asserted. It is not our busi- 



* Social-Democracy is the advanced detachment of the prole- 
tariat. Every militant Social-Democrat, whether industrial worker 
or intellectual, belongs to this detachment. 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 93 

ness to introduce socialist consciousness into the working- 
class movement, it is not our business to lead this move- 
ment — that would be fruitless coercion; our duty is 
merely to watch the movement and take careful note of 
what goes on in social life — we must drag at the tail of 
the spontaneous movement.* In short, Social-Democracy 
was depicted as an unnecessary burden on the movement. 

Whoever refuses to recognise Social-Democracy must 
also refuse to recognise the Social-Democratic Party. 

That is precisely why the "Economists" so persistently 
reiterated that a proletarian political party could not 
exist in Russia. Let the liberals engage in the political 
struggle, it is more fitting for them to do so, said the 
"Economists." But what must we Social-Democrats do? 
We must continue to exist as separate circles, each 
operating isolatedly in its own corner. 



* Our Social-Democrat^^ has developed a passion for "criti- 
cism" (see No. 1, "Majority or Minority?") but I must observe 
that it does not correctly describe the "Economists" and Rabocheye 
Delo-ists (they scarcely differ from each other). It is not that they 
"ignored political questions," but that they dragged at the tail 
of the movement and repeated what the movement suggested to 
them. At one time only strikes took place, and so they preached 
the economic struggle. The period of demonstrations came (1901), 
blood was shed, disillusionment was rife, and the workers turned to 
terrorism in the belief that that would save them from the tyrants, 
and so the "Econoraists-Rabocheye Delo-ists" also joined the 
general chorus and pompously declared: The time has come to 
resort to terrorism, to attack the prisons, liberate our comrades 
and so forth (see "A Historic Turn," Rabocheye Delo^^). As you 
see, this does not at all mean that they "ignored political questions." 
The author has borrowed his "criticism" from Martynov, but it 
would have been more useful had he familiarised himself with 
history. 



94 J. V. S T A L I N 



Not a Party, but a circle! they said. 

Thus, on the one hand, the working-class movement 
grew and stood in need of a guiding advanced detach- 
ment; on the other hand, "Social-Democracy," repre- 
sented by the "Economists," instead of taking the lead 
of the movement, abnegated itself and dragged at the 
tail of the movement. 

It was necessary to proclaim for all to hear the idea 
that a spontaneous working-class movement without so- 
cialism means groping in the dark, and, even if it ever 
does lead to the goal, who knows how long it will take, and 
at what cost in suffering; that, consequently, socialist 
consciousness is of enormous importance for the working- 
class movement. 

It was also necessary to proclaim that it is the duty 
of the vehicle of this consciousness, Social-Democracy, 
to imbue the working-class movement with socialist 
consciousness; to be always at the head of the movement 
and not to be a mere observer of the spontaneous working- 
class movement, not to drag at its tail. 

It was also necessary to express the idea that it is 
the direct duty of Russian Social-Democracy to muster 
the separate advanced detachments of the proletariat, 
to unite them in one party, and thereby to put an end 
to disunity in the Party once and for all. 

It was precisely these tasks that Iskra proceeded to 
formulate. 

This is what it said in its programmatic article (see 
Iskra, No. 1): "Social-Democracy is a combination of the 
working-class movement with socialism,"^'' i.e., the move- 
ment without socialism, or socialism standing aloof from 
the movement, is an undesirable state of affairs which 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 95 

Social-Democracy must combat. But as the "Economists- 
Rabocheye Delo-ists" worshipped the spontaneous move- 
ment, and as they belittled the importance of socialism, 
Iskra stated: "Isolated from Social-Democracy, the work- 
ing-class movement becomes petty and inevitably be- 
comes bourgeois." Consequently, it is the duty of Social- 
Democracy "to point out to this movement its ultimate 
aim and its political tasks, and to guard its political and 
ideological independence." 

What are the duties of Russian Social-Democracy? 
"From this," continues Iskra, "automatically emerges 
the task which it is the mission of Russian Social-Democ- 
racy to fulfil: to imbue the masses of the proletariat 
with the ideas of socialism and with political conscious- 
ness and to organise a revolutionary party that will be 
inseverably connected with the spontaneous working- 
class movement," — i.e., it must always be at the head 
of the movement, and its paramount duty is to unite the 
Social-Democratic forces of the working-class movement 
in one party. 

That is how the editorial board of Iskra* for- 
mulated its programme. 

Did Iskra carry out this splendid programme? 

Everybody knows how devotedly it put these ex- 
tremely important ideas into practice. That was clearly 
demonstrated to us by the Second Party Congress, at 
which the majority, numbering 35 votes, recognised 
Iskra as the central organ of the Party. 

Is it not ridiculous, after that, to hear certain pseudo- 
Marxists "berate" the old Iskra? 



* The editorial board of Iskra then consisted of six members: 
Plekhanov, Axelrod, Zasulich, Martov, Starover^'' and Lenin. 



96 J. V. S T A L I N 



This is what the Menshevik Social-Democrat writes 
about Iskra: 

"It (Iskra) should have analysed the ideas of 'Econ- 
omism,' rejected its fallacious views and accepted its 
correct ones, and directed it into a new channel. . . . 
But that did not happen. The fight against 'Economism' 
gave rise to another extreme: the economic struggle was 
belittled and treated with disdain; supreme importance 
was attached to the political struggle. Politics without 
economy (it ought to be: "without economics") — 
such is the new trend" (see Social-Democrat, No . 1, "Major- 
ity or Minority?"). 

But when, where, in what country did all this 
happen, highly esteemed "critic"? What did Plekhanov, 
Axelrod, Zasulich, Martov and Starover do? Why did 
they not turn Iskra to the "true" path? Did they not 
constitute the majority on the editorial board? And 
where have you yourself been up to now, my dear sir? 
Why did you not warn the Second Party Congress? It 
would not then have recognised Iskra as the central 
organ. 

But let us leave the "critic." 

The point is that Iskra correctly emphasised the 
"urgent questions of the day"; it took the path I spoke 
about above and devotedly carried out its programme. 

Iskra s stand was still more distinctly and convinc- 
ingly formulated by Lenin, in his splendid book What Is 
To Be Done? 

Let us deal with this book. 

The "Economists" worshipped the spontaneous work- 
ing-class movement; but who does not know that the sponta- 
neous movement is a movement without socialism, that it 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 97 

"is trade unionism,"* which refuses to see anything 
beyond the limits of capitalism. Who does not know 
that the working-class movement without socialism means 
marking time within the limits of capitalism, wander- 
ing around private property, and, even if this ever does 
lead to the social revolution, who knows how long it will 
take, and at what cost in suffering? Does it make no differ- 
ence to the workers whether they enter the "promised 
land" in the near future or after a long period of time; 
by an easy or by a difficult road? Clearly, whoever ex- 
tols the spontaneous movement and worships it, whether 
he wishes to or not, digs a chasm between socialism and 
the working-class movement, belittles the importance 
of socialist ideology and expels it from life, and, whether 
he wishes to or not, subordinates the workers to bourgeois 
ideology; for he fails to understand that "Social-Democ- 
racy is a combination of the working-class movement 
with socialism,"** that "a// worship of the spontaneity 
of the working-class movement, all belittling of the 
role of 'the conscious element,' of the role of Social- 
Democracy, means, quite irrespective of whether the belittler 
wants to or not, strengthening the influence of bourgeois 
ideology over the workers."*** 

To explain this in greater detail: In our times only 

two ideologies can exist: bourgeois and socialist. The 

difference between them is, among other things, that the 

former, i.e., bourgeois ideology, is much older, more 



* Lenin, What Is To Be Done?, p. 28. 
** Kautsky, The Erfurt Programme, published by the Central 
Committee, p. 94. 
*** Lenin, What Is To Be Done? , p. 26. 



98 J. V. S T A L I N 



widespread and more deep-rooted in life than the latter; 
that one encounters bourgeois views everywhere, in one's 
own and in other circles, whereas socialist ideology is 
only taking its first steps, is only just hewing a road 
for itself. Needless to say, as regards the spread of ideas, 
bourgeois ideology, i.e., trade-unionist consciousness, 
spreads far more easily and embraces the spontaneous 
working-class movement far more widely than socialist 
ideology, which is only taking its first steps. That is 
all the more true for the reason that, even as it is, the 
spontaneous movement — the movement without socialism 
— "leads to its becoming subordinated to bourgeois ideol- 
ogy."* And subordination to bourgeois ideology means 
ousting socialist ideology, because one is the negation 
of the other. 

We shall be asked: But surely the working class 
gravitates towards socialism? Yes, it gravitates towards 
socialism. If it did not, the activities of Social-Democracy 
would be fruitless. But it is also true that this gravitation 
is counteracted and hindered by another — gravitation 
towards bourgeois ideology. 

I have just said that our social life is impregnated 
with bourgeois ideas and, consequently; it is much easier 
to spread bourgeois ideology than socialist ideology. 
It must not be forgotten that meanwhile the bourgeois 
ideologists are not asleep; they, in their own way, dis- 
guise themselves as Socialists and are tireless in their 
efforts to subordinate the working class to bourgeois 
ideology. If, under these circumstances, the Social- 
Democrats, too, like the "Economists," go woolgathering 



* Lenin, What Is To Be Done? , p 28. 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 99 

and drag at the tail of the spontaneous movement (and 
the working-class movement is spontaneous when Social- 
Democracy behaves that way), then it is self-evident 
that the spontaneous working-class movement will pro- 
ceed along that beaten path and submit to bourgeois 
ideology until, of course, long wanderings and sufferings 
compel it to break with bourgeois ideology and strive 
for the social revolution. 

It is this that is called gravitating towards bourgeois 
ideology . 

Here is what Lenin says: 

"The working class spontaneously gravitates towards 
socialism, but the more widespread (and continuously re- 
vived in the most diverse forms) bourgeois ideology nev- 
ertheless spontaneously imposes itself upon the working 
class still more."* This is precisely why the sponta- 
neous working-class movement, while it is spontaneous, 
while it is not yet combined with socialist con- 
sciousness — becomes subordinated to bourgeois ideology 
and gravitates towards such subordination.** If that 
were not the case, Social-Democratic criticism, Social- 
Democratic propaganda, would be superfluous, and it 
would be unnecessary to "combine the working-class 
movement with socialism.''' 

It is the duty of Social-Democracy to combat this 
gravitation towards bourgeois ideology and to stimulate 
the other gravitation — gravitation towards socialism. 
Some day, of course, after long wanderings and sufferings, 
the spontaneous movement would come into its own. 



* Lenin, What Is To Be Done? , p. 29. 
** Ibid., p. 28. 



100 J. V. STALIN 



would arrive at the gates of the social revolution, with- 
out the aid of Social-Democracy, because "the working 
class spontaneously gravitates towards socialism."* But 
what is to happen in the meantime, what shall we do in 
the meantime? Fold our arms across our chests as the 
"Economists" do and leave the field to the Struves and 
Zubatovs? Renounce Social-Democracy and thereby help 
bourgeois, trade-unionist ideology to predominate? For- 
get Marxism and not "combine socialism with the work- 
ing-class movement"? 

No! Social-Democracy is the advanced detachment of 
the proletariat,** and its duty is always to be at the head 
of the proletariat; its duty is "to divert the working-class 
movement from this spontaneous, trade-unionist tenden- 
cy to come under the wing of the bourgeoisie, and to 
bring it under the wing of revolutionary Social-Democ- 
racy."*** The duty of Social-Democracy is to imbue the 
spontaneous working-class movement with socialist con- 
sciousness, to combine the working-class movement with 
socialism and thereby lend the proletarian struggle a 
Social-Democratic character. 

It is said that in some countries the working class 
itself worked out the socialist ideology (scientific so- 
cialism) and will itself work it out in other countries 
too, and that, therefore, it is unnecessary to introduce 
socialist consciousness into the working-class movement 
from without. But this is a profound mistake. To be 
able to work out the theory of scientific socialism one 



* Lenin, What Is To Be Done? , p. 29. 
** K. Marx, Manifesto, p. 15.^1 
^** Lenin, What Is To Be Done? , p. 28. 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 101 

must stand at the head of science, one must be armed with 
scientific knowledge and be able deeply to investigate 
the laws of historical development. But the working 
class, while it remains a working class, is unable to stand 
in the van of science, to advance it and investigate scien- 
tifically the laws of history; it lacks both the time and 
the means for that. Scientific socialism "can arise only 
on the basis of profound scientific knowledge. . ." — 
says K. Kautsky. ". . . The vehicle of science is not the 
proletariat, but the bourgeois intelligentsia (K. Kautsky 's 
italics). It was in the minds of individual members 
of that stratum that modern socialism originated, and it 
was they who communicated it to the more intellectually 
developed proletarians. . . ."* 

Accordingly, Lenin says: All those who worship the 
spontaneous working-class movement and look on with 
folded arms, those who continuously belittle the impor- 
tance of Social-Democracy and leave the field to the 
Struves and Zubatovs — all imagine that this movement 
itself works out scientific socialism. "But that is a pro- 
found mistake."** Some people believe that the St. Pe- 
tersburg workers who went on strike in the nineties pos- 
sessed Social-Democratic consciousness, but that, too, is 
a mistake. There was no such consciousness among 
them and "there could not be. It (Social-Democratic con- 
sciousness) could be brought to them only from with- 
out. The history of all countries shows that the working 



* Lenin, What Is To Be Done?, p. 27, where these lines are 
quoted from Kautsky 's well-known article in Neue Zeit,^^ 1901-02, 
No. 3, p. 79. 

** Ibid., p. 26. 



102 J. V. STALIN 



class, exclusively by its own efforts, is able to develop 
only trade-unionist consciousness, i.e., the conviction 
that it is necessary to combine in unions, fight the em- 
ployers and strive to compel the government to pass 
necessary labour legislation, etc. The theory of socialism, 
however, grew out of the philosophic, historical and eco- 
nomic theories that were elaborated by the educated 
representatives of the propertied classes, the intellectuals. 
According to their social status, the founders of modern 
scientific socialism, Marx and Engels, themselves be- 
longed to the bourgeois intelligentsia."* That does not 
mean, of course, continues Lenin, "that the workers 
have no part in creating such an ideology. But they take 
part not as workers, but as socialist theoreticians, as 
Proudhons and Weitlings (both were working men); in 
other words, they take part only when, and to the ex- 
tent that they are able, more or less, to acquire the knowl- 
edge of their age and advance that knowledge."** 

We can picture all this to ourselves approximately 
as follows. There is a capitalist system. There are workers 
and masters. Between them a struggle is raging. So far 
there are no signs whatever of scientific socialism. Scien- 
tific socialism was not even thought of anywhere when 
the workers were already waging their struggle. . . . 
Yes, the workers are fighting. But they are fighting sep- 
arately against their masters; they come into collision 
with their local authorities; here they go out on strike, 
there they hold meetings and demonstrations; here they 
demand rights from the government, there they proclaim 



* Lenin, What Is To Be Done?, pp. 20-21. 
** Ibid., p. 27. 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 103 

a boycott; some talk about the political struggle, others 
about the economic struggle, and so forth. But that does 
not mean that the workers possess Social-Democratic 
consciousness; it does not mean that the aim of their 
movement is to overthrow the capitalist system, that 
they are as sure of the overthrow of capitalism and 
of the establishment of the socialist system as they are 
of the inevitable rising of the sun, that they regard their 
conquest of political power (the dictatorship of the 
proletariat) as an essential means for achieving the vic- 
tory of socialism, etc. 

Meanwhile science develops. The working-class move- 
ment gradually attracts its attention. Most scientists 
arrive at the opinion that the working-class movement is 
a revolt of troublemakers whom it would be a good thing 
to bring to their senses with the aid of the whip. Others 
believe that it is the duty of the rich to throw some 
crumbs to the poor, i.e., that the working-class move- 
ment is a movement of paupers whose object is to obtain 
alms. And out of a thousand scientists perhaps only one 
may prove to be a man who approaches the working-class 
movement scientifically, scientifically investigates the 
whole of social life, watches the conflict of classes, listens 
closely to the murmuring of the working class and, finally, 
proves scientifically that the capitalist system is by no 
means eternal, that it is just as transient as feudalism 
was, and that it must inevitably be superseded by its 
negation, the socialist system, which can be established 
only by the proletariat by means of a social revolution. 
In short, scientific socialism is elaborated. 

It goes without saying that if there were no capital- 
ism and the class struggle there would he no scientific 



104 J. V. STALIN 



socialism. But it is also true that these few, for ex- 
ample Marx and Engels, would not have worked out 
scientific socialism had they not possessed scientific 
knowledge. 

What is scientific socialism without the working- 
class movement^ — A compass which, if left unused, will 
only grow rusty and then will have to be thrown over- 
board. 

What is the working-class movement without social- 
ism? — A ship without a compass which will reach the 
other shore in any case, but would reach it much sooner 
and with less danger if it had a compass. 

Combine the two and you will get a splendid vessel, 
which will speed straight towards the other shore and 
reach its haven unharmed. 

Combine the working-class movement with socialism 
and you will get a Social-Democratic movement which 
will speed straight towards the "promised land." 

And so, it is the duty of Social-Democracy (and not 
only of Social-Democratic intellectuals) to combine so- 
cialism with the working-class movement, to imbue the 
movement with socialist consciousness and thereby 
lend the spontaneous working-class movement a Social- 
Democratic character. 

That is what Lenin says. 

Some people assert that in the opinion of Lenin and 
the "majority," the working-class movement will perish, 
will fail to achieve the social revolution if it is not 
combined with socialist ideology. That is an invention, 
the invention of idle minds, which could have entered 
the heads only of pseudo-Marxists like An (see "What 
Is a Party?", Mogzauri,^^ No. 6). 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 105 

Lenin says definitely that "The working class spon- 
taneously gravitates towards socialism,"* and if he does 
not dwell on this at great length, it is only because he 
thinks it unnecessary to prove what has already been 
proved. Moreover, Lenin did not set out to investigate 
the spontaneous movement; he merely wanted to show 
those engaged in practical Party work what they ought to 
do consciously. 

Here is what Lenin says in another passage in his 
controversy with Martov: 

"'Our Party is the conscious exponent of an uncon- 
scious process.' Exactly. And for this very reason it is 
wrong to want 'every striker' to have the right to call 
himself a Party member, for if 'every strike' were not 
only a spontaneous expression of a powerful class instinct 
and of the class struggle, which is inevitably leading to 
the social revolution, but a conscious expression of that 
process . . . then our Party . . . would at once put an 
end to the entire bourgeois society."** 

As you see, in Lenin's opinion, even the class strug- 
gle and the class conflicts which cannot be called Social- 
Democratic, nevertheless inevitably lead the working 
class to the social revolution. 

If you are interested to hear the opinion of other 
representatives of the "majority," here is what one of 
them. Comrade Gorin, said at the Second Party Con- 
gress: 

"What would the situation be if the proletariat were 
left to itself? It would be similar to what it was on the 



* Lenin, What Is To Be Done? , p. 29. 
** Lenin, One Step Forward, Two Steps Back, p. 53. 



106 J. V. STALIN 



eve of the bourgeois revolution. The bourgeois revo- 
lutionaries had no scientific ideology. The bourgeois sys- 
tem came into being nevertheless. Even without ideol- 
ogists the proletariat would, of course, in the long 
run, work towards the social revolution, but it would 
do so instinctively. . . . Instinctively the proletariat 
would practise socialism, but it would lack socialist 
theory. Only, the process would be slow and more 
painful."* 

Further explanation is superfluous. 

Thus, the spontaneous working-class movement, the 
working-class movement without socialism, inevitably be- 
comes petty and assumes a trade-unionist character — it 
submits to bourgeois ideology. Can we draw the conclu- 
sion from this that socialism is everything and the work- 
ing-class movement nothing? Of course not! Only idealists 
say that. Some day, in the far distant future, economic 
development will inevitably bring the working class 
to the social revolution, and, consequently, compel it 
to break off all connection with bourgeois ideology. 
The only point is that this path is a very long and 
painful one. 

On the other hand, socialism without the working- 
class movement, no matter on what scientific basis it 
may have arisen, nevertheless remains an empty phrase 
and loses its significance. Can we draw the conclusion 
from this that the movement is everything and socialism — 
nothing? Of course not! Only pseudo-Marxists, who attach 
no importance to consciousness because it is engendered 
by social life itself, argue that way. Socialism can be 



Minutes of the Second Party Congress, p. 129. 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 107 

combined with the working-class movement and thereby 
be transformed from an empty phrase into a sharp 
weapon. 

The conclusion? 

The conclusion is that the working-class movement 
must be combined with socialism; practical activities 
and theoretical thought must merge into one and there- 
by lend the spontaneous working-class movement a 
Social-Democratic character, for "Social-Democracy is a 
combination of the working-class movement with social- 
ism."* Then, socialism, combined with the working-class 
movement, will, in the hands of the workers, be trans- 
formed from an empty phrase into a tremendous force. 
Then, the spontaneous movement, transformed into a 
Social-Democratic movement, will march rapidly along 
the true road to the socialist system. 

What, then, is the mission of Russian Social-Democ- 
racy? What must we do? 

Our duty, the duty of Social-Democracy, is to deflect 
the spontaneous working-class movement from the path of 
narrow trade unionism to the Social-Democratic path. Our 
duty is to introduce socialist consciousness** into this 
movement and unite the advanced forces of the working 
class in one centralised party. Our task is always to be at 
the head of the movement and combat tirelessly all 
those — whether they be foes or "friends" — who hinder 
the accomplishment of this task. 

Such, in general, is the position of the "majority." 



* The Erfurt Programme, published by the Central Commit- 
tee, p. 94- 

** which Marx and Engels elaborated. 



108 J. V. STALIN 



Our "minority" dislikes the position taken by the 
"majority"; it is "un-Marxist," it says; it "fundamen- 
tally contradicts" Marxism! But is that so, most highly 
esteemed gentlemen? Where, when, on what planet? 
Read our articles, they say, and you will be convinced 
that we are right. Very well, let us read them. 

We have before us an article entitled "What Is 
a Party?" (see Mogzauri, No. 6). Of what does the 
"critic" An accuse the Party "majority"? "It (the "ma- 
jority") . . . proclaims itself the head of the Party . . . 
and demands submission from others . . . and to justify 
its conduct it often even invents new theories, such 
as, for example, that the working people cannot by 
their own efforts assimilate (my italics) 'lofty ideals,' 
etc."* 

The question now is: Does the "majority" advance, 
or has it ever advanced, such "theories"? Never! 
Nowhere! On the contrary. Comrade Lenin, the ideol- 
ogical representative of the "majority," very defi- 
nitely says that the working class very easily assimilates 
"lofty ideals," that it very easily assimilates socialism. 
Listen: 

"It is often said: the working class spontaneously 
gravitates towards socialism. This is perfectly true 
in the sense that socialist theory defines the causes 
of the misery of the working class more profoundly 
and more correctly than any other theory, and for 
that reason the workers are able to assimilate it so 
easily"** 



* Mogzauri, No. 6, p. 7L 
** Lenin, What Is To Be Done?, p. 29. 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 109 

As you see, in the opinion of the "majority," the 
workers easily assimilate the "lofty ideals" which are 
called socialism. 

So what is An getting at? Where did he dig up his 
queer "find"? The point is, reader, that "critic" An had 
something entirely different in mind. He had in mind 
that passage in What Is To Be Done? where Lenin speaks 
of the elaboration of the theory of socialism, where he 
says that the working class cannot elaborate scientific 
socialism by its own efforts.* But how is that? — you 
will ask. To elaborate the theory of socialism is one thing 
— to assimilate it is another. Why did An forget those 
words of Lenin's in which he so clearly speaks of the 
assimilation of "lofty ideals"? You are right, reader, but 
what can An do since he is so anxious to be a "critic"? 
Just think what a heroic deed he is performing: he invents 
a "theory" of his own, ascribes it to his opponent, and 
then bombards the fruit of his own imagination! That 
is criticism, if you like! At all events it is beyond doubt 
that An "could not by his own efforts assimilate" Lenin's 
book What Is To Be Done? 

Let us now open the so-called Social-Democrat. What 
does the author of the article "Majority or Minority?" 
(see Social-Democrat, No. 1) say? 

Plucking up courage, he vociferously attacks Lenin 
for expressin g the opinion that the "natural (it ought to 
b e : 

"spontaneous") development of the working-class move- 
ment leads not to socialism, but to bourgeois ideology."** 
Thp niifhnr evidently fails to understand that the 

* Lenin, What Is To Be Done?, pp. 20-21. 
** Social-Democrat, No. 1, p. 14. 



110 J. V. STALIN 



spontaneous working-class movement is a movement with- 
out socialism (let the author prove that this is not so), 
and that such a movement inevitably submits to bourgeois 
trade-unionist ideology, gravitates towards it; for in our 
times there can be only two ideologies, socialist and bour- 
geois, and where the former is absent the latter inevita- 
bly appears and occupies its place (prove the opposite!). 
Yes, this is exactly what Lenin says. But at the same time 
he does not forget about another gravitation that is 
characteristic of the working-class movement — gravita- 
tion towards socialism, which is only temporarily eclipsed 
by the gravitation towards bourgeois ideology. Lenin 
says definitely that "the working class spontaneously 
gravitates towards socialism,"* and he rightly observes 
that it is the duty of Social-Democracy to accelerate 
the victory of this gravitation by, among other things, 
combating the "Economists." Why, then, esteemed 
"critic," did you not quote these words of Lenin in 
your article? Were they not uttered by the very same 
Lenin? Because it was not to your advantage. Isn't 
that so? 

"In Lenin's opinion . . . the worker, owing to his 
position {my italics), is a bourgeois rather than a Social- 
ist .. . "** — continues the author. Well! I didn't ex- 
pect anything so stupid even from such an author! Does 
Lenin talk about the worker's position? Does he say that 
owing to his position the worker is a bourgeois? Who 
but an idiot can say that owing to his position the worker 
is a bourgeois — the worker who owns no means of produc- 

* Lenin, What Is To Be Done?, pp. 29. 
** Social-Democrat, No. 1, p. 14. 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 111 

tion and lives by selling his labour power? No! Lenin 
says something entirely different. The point is that owing 
to ray position I can be a proletarian and not a bourgeois, 
but at the same time I can be unconscious of my position 
and, as a consequence, submit to bourgeois ideology. 
This is exactly how the matter stands in this case with 
the working class. And it means something entirely dif- 
ferent. 

In general, the author is fond of hurling empty phrases 
about — he shoots them off without thinking! Thus, 
for example, the author obstinately reiterates that 
"Leninism fundamentally contradicts Marxism"*; he 
reiterates this and fails to see where this "idea" leads him. 
Let us believe for a moment his statement that Lenin- 
ism does "fundamentally contradict Marxism." But what 
follows? What comes of this? The following. "Leninism 
carried with it" Iskra (the old Iskra) — this the author 
does not deny — consequently Iskra, too, "fundamentally 
contradicts Marxism." The Second Party Congress — the 
majority, numbering 35 votes — recognised Iskra as the 
central organ of the Party and highly praised its services**; 
consequently, that congress, its programme and its tactics, 
also "fundamentally contradict Marxism." . . . Funny, 
isn't it, reader? 

The author, nevertheless, continues: "In Lenin's opin- 
ion the spontaneous working-class movement is moving 
towards combination with the bourgeoisie. . . ." Yes, 



* Social-Democrat, No. 1, p. 15. 
** See Minutes of the Second Party Congress, p. 147. Ibid., 
Resolution, where Iskra is described as a true advocate of the prin- 
ciples of Social-Democratism. 



112 J. V. STALIN 



indeed, the author is undoubtedly moving towards combi- 
nation with idiocy, and it would be a good thing if he 
digressed from that path. 

But let us leave the "critic." Let us turn to Marxism. 

Our esteemed "critic" obstinately reiterates that the 
stand taken by the "majority" and by its representa- 
tive, Lenin, fundamentally contradicts Marxism, be- 
cause, he says, Kautsky, Marx and Engels say the op- 
posite of what Lenin advocates! Is that the case? Let 
us see! 

"K. Kautsky," the author informs us, "writes in 
his Erfurt Programme: 'The interests of the proletariat 
and the bourgeoisie are so antagonistic that the strivings 
of these two classes cannot be combined for any more 
or less prolonged period. In every country where the 
capitalist mode of production prevails the participa- 
tion of the working class in politics sooner or later 
leads to the working class separating from the bour- 
geois parties and forming an independent workers' 
party.''' 

But what follows from this? Only that the interests 
of the bourgeoisie and the proletariat are antagonistic, 
that "sooner or later" the proletariat separates from 
the bourgeoisie to form an independent workers' party 
(remember: a workers' party, but not a Social-Democratic 
workers' party). The author assumes that here Kautsky 
disagrees with Lenin. But Lenin says that sooner or 
later the proletariat will not only separate from the 
bourgeoisie, but will bring about the social revolu- 
tion, i.e., will overthrow the bourgeoisie.* The task 



See Lenin, One Step Forward, Two Steps Back, p. 53. 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 113 

of Social-Democracy — he adds — is to try to make 
this come about as quickly as possible, and to come 
about consciously. Yes, consciously and not sponta- 
neously, for it is about this consciousness that Lenin 
writes. 

". . . Where things have reached the stage of the 
formation of an independent workers' party," continues 
the "critic," citing Kautsky's book, "the party must 
sooner or later, of natural necessity, assimilate social- 
ist tendencies if it was not inspired by them from the 
very outset; it must in the long run become a socialist 
workers' party, i.e., Social-Democracy.'"* 

What does that mean? Only that the workers' party 
will assimilate socialist trends. But does Lenin deny 
this? Not in the least! Lenin plainly says that not only 
the workers' party, but the entire working class assimi- 
lates socialism.** What, then, is the nonsense we hear 
from Social-Democrat and its prevaricating hero? What 
is the use of all this balderdash? As the saying goes: 
He heard the sound of a bell, but where it came from 
he could not tell. That's exactly what happened to our 
muddle-headed author. 

As you see, Kautsky does not differ one iota from 
Lenin on that point. But all this reveals the author's 
thoughtlessness with exceptional clarity. 

Does Kautsky say anything in support of the stand 
taken by the "majority"? Here is what he writes in one 
of his splendid articles, in which he analyses the draft 
programme of Austrian Social-Democracy: 



* Social-Democrat, No. 1, p. 15. 
** Lenin, What Is To Be Done? , p. 29. 



114 J. V. STALIN 



"Many of our revisionist critics (the followers 
of Bernstein) believe that Marx asserted that econom- 
ic development and the class struggle create not only 
the conditions for socialist production, but also, and 
directly, engender the consciousness {K. Kautsky's 
italics) of its necessity. And these critics at once object 
that Britain, the country most highly developed capi- 
talistically, is more remote than any other from this 
consciousness. Judging from the (Austrian) draft, one 
might assume that this . . . view . . . was shared by 
the committee that drafted the Austrian programme. 
In the draft programme it is stated: 'The more capital- 
ist development increases the numbers of the proletar- 
iat, the more the proletariat is compelled and becomes 
fit to fight against capitalism. The proletariat be- 
comes conscious'' of the possibility of and of the neces- 
sity for socialism. In this connection socialist con- 
sciousness appears to be a necessary and direct 
result of the proletarian class struggle. But that is 
absolutely untrue. . . . Modern socialist conscious- 
ness can arise only on the basis of profound scientific 
knowledge. . . . The vehicle of science is not 
the proletariat, but the bourgeois intelligentsia 
(K. Kautsky 's italics) . It was in the minds of individual 
members of that stratum that modern socialism origi- 
nated, and it was they who communicated it (scientific 
socialism) to the more intellectually developed prole- 
tarians who, in their turn, introduce it into the 
proletarian class struggle. . . . Thus, socialist con- 
sciousness is something introduced into the prole- 
tarian class struggle from without and not some- 
thing that arose within it spontaneously. Accordingly, 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 115 

the old Hainfeld programme^'' quite rightly stated that 
the task of Social-Democracy is to imbue the pro- 
letariat with the consciousness of its position and 
the consciousness of its task . . ."* 

Do you not recall, reader, analogous thoughts ex- 
pressed by Lenin on this question; do you not recall the 
well-known stand taken by the "majority"? Why did the 
"Tiflis Committee" and its Social-Democrat conceal the 
truth? Why, in speaking of Kautsky, did our esteemed 
"critic" fail to quote these words of Kautsky's in his 
article? Whom are these most highly esteemed gentlemen 
trying to deceive? Why are they so "contemptuous" 
towards their readers? Is it not because . . . they fear 
the truth, hide from the truth, and think that the truth 
also can be hidden? They behave like the bird which 
hides its head in the sand and imagines that nobody can 
see it! But they delude themselves as that bird does. 

If socialist consciousness has been worked out 
on a scientific basis, and if this consciousness is 
introduced into the working-class movement from with- 
out by the efforts of Social-Democracy** — it is clear 
that all this happens because the working class, so long 
as it remains a working class, cannot lead science and 
work out scientific socialism by its own efforts: it lacks 
both the time and the means for this. 

Here is what K. Kautsky says in his Erfurt Pro- 
gramme: 



* Neue Zeit, 1901-02, XX, No. 3, p. 79. Lenin quotes this passage 
from Kautsky's splendid article in What Is To Be Done? , p. 27. 
** And not only by Social-Democratic intellectuals. 



116 J. V. STALIN 



". . . The proletarian can at best assimilate part of 
the knowledge worked out by bourgeois learning and 
adapt it to his objects and needs, but so long as he re- 
mains a proletarian he lacks the leisure and means inde- 
pendently to carry science beyond the limits reached by 
bourgeois thinkers. Hence, spontaneous workers' social- 
ism must bear all the essential marks of utopianism"* 
(utopianism is a false, unscientific theory). 

Utopian socialism of this kind often assumes an 
anarchistic character, continues Kautsky, but ". . . As 
is well known, wherever the anarchist movement (mean- 
ing by that proletarian utopianism — K. Kautsky) really 
permeated the masses and became a class movement 
it always, sooner or later, despite its seeming radicalism, 
ended by being transformed into a purely trade-unionist 
movement of the narrowest kind."** 

In other words, if the working-class movement is not 
combined with scientific socialism it inevitably becomes 
petty, assumes a "narrow trade-unionist" character and, 
consequently, submits to trade-unionist ideology. 

"But that means belittling the workers and extol- 
ling the intelligentsia!" — howl our "critic" and his 
Social-Democrat. . . . Poor "critic"! Miserable Social- 
Democrat\ They take the proletariat for a capricious 
young lady who must not be told the truth, who must 
always be paid compliments so that she will not run 
away! No, most highly esteemed gentlemen! We believe 
that the proletariat will display more staunchness than 



* The Erfurt Programme, published by the Central Commit- 
tee, p. 93. 

** Ibid., p. 94. 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 117 

you think. We believe that it will not fear the truth! 
As for you. . . . What can one say to you? Even now 
you have shown that you fear the truth and, in your 
article, did not tell your readers what Kautsky's real 
views are. . . . 

Thus, scientific socialism without the working-class 
movement is an empty phrase that can always be easily 
thrown to the winds. 

On the other hand, the working-class movement 
without socialism is aimless trade-unionist wandering, 
which some time or other will, of course, lead to the 
social revolution, but at the cost of long pain and 
suffering. 

The conclusion? 

"The working-class movement must combine with 
socialism": "Social-Democracy is a combination of the 
working-class movement with socialism."* 

That is what Kautsky, the Marxist theoretician, 
says. 

We have seen that Iskra (the old Iskra) and the "ma- 
jority" say the same. 

We have seen that Comrade Lenin takes the same 
stand. 

Thus, the "majority" takes a firm Marxist stand. 

Clearly, "contempt for the workers," "extolling 
the intelligentsia," the "un-Marxist stand of the ma- 
jority," and similar gems which the Menshevik "crit- 
ics" scatter so profusely, are nothing more than catch- 
words, figments of the imagination of the Tiflis "Men- 
sheviks." 



The Erfurt Programme, p. 94. 



118 J. V. STALIN 



On the other hand, we shall see that actually it is 
the Tiflis "minority," the "Tiflis Committee" and its 
Social-Democrat that "fundamentally contradict Marx- 
ism." But of this anon. Meanwhile, we draw attention 
to the following: 

In support of his utterances, the author of the 
article "Majority or Minority?" quotes the words of 
Marx (?): "The theoretician of any given class comes 
theoretically to the conclusion to which the class itself 
has already arrived practically."* 

One of two things. Either the author does not know 
the Georgian language, or else there is a printer's error. 
No literate person would say "?o which it has already 
arrived.'' It would be correct to say: ''at which it has 
already arrived,'" or "?o which it is already coming.'" If 
the author had in mind the latter {to which it is already 
coming), then I must observe that he is misquoting Marx; 
Marx did not say anything of the kind. If the author had 
the first formula in mind, then the sentence he quoted 
should have run as follows: "The theoretician of any 
given class arrives theoretically at the conclusion at 
which the class itself has already arrived practically.'" 
In other words, since Marx and Engels arrived theoret- 
ically at the conclusion that the collapse of capitalism 
and the building of socialism are inevitable — it implies 
that the proletariat has already rejected capitalism /)rac- 
tically, has already crushed capitalism and has built 
up the socialist way of life in its place! 

Poor Marx! Who knows how many more absurdities 
our pseudo-Marxists will ascribe to him? 



Social-Democrat, No 1, p. 15. 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 119 

But did Marx really say that? Here is what he actu- 
ally said: The theoreticians who represent the petty 
bourgeoisie "are . . . driven, theoretically, to the same 
problems and solutions to which material interest and so- 
cial position drive the latter practically. This is, in gener- 
al, the relationship between the political and literary 
representatives of a class and the class they represent."* 

As you see, Marx does not say ''already arrived to." 
These "philosophical" words were invented by our es- 
teemed "critic." 

Consequently Marx's own words possess an entirely 
different meaning. 

What idea does Marx propound in the above-quoted 
proposition? Only that the theoretician of a given class 
cannot create an ideal, the elements of which do not 
exist in life; that he can only indicate the elements of the 
future and on that basis theoretically create an ideal 
which the given class reaches practically. The difference 
is that the theoretician runs ahead of the class and in- 
dicates the embryo of the future before the class does. 
That is what is meant by "arriving at something theo- 
retically." 

Here is what Marx and Engels say in their Manifesto: 

"The Communists (i.e., Social-Democrats), therefore, 
are on the one hand, practically, the most advanced 
and resolute section of the working-class parties of every 
country, that section which pushes forward all others; 
on the other hand, theoretically, they have over the 



* If The Eighteenth Brumaire^^ is not available, see Min- 
utes of the Second Party Congress, p. Ill, where these words of 
Marx are quoted. 



120 J. V. STALIN 



great mass of the proletariat the advantage of clearly un- 
derstanding the line of march, the conditions, and the 
ultimate general results of the proletarian movement." 

Yes, the ideologists "push forward,'' they see much 
farther than the "great mass of the proletariat," and 
this is the whole point. The ideologists push forward, and 
it is precisely for this reason that the idea, socialist 
consciousness, is of such great importance for the 
movement. 

Is that why you attack the "majority," esteemed 
"critic"? If it is, then say good-bye to Marxism, and 
know that the "majority" is proud of its Marxist stand. 

The situation of the "majority" in this case in 
many ways recalls that of Engels in the nineties. 

The idea is the source of social life, asserted the 
idealists. In their opinion, social consciousness is the 
foundation upon which the life of society is built. That 
is why they were called idealists. 

It had to be proved that ideas do not drop from 
the skies, but are engendered by life itself. 

Marx and Engels entered the historical arena and 
magnificently accomplished this task. They proved that 
social life is the source of ideas and, therefore, that the 
life of society is the foundation on which social con- 
sciousness is built. Thereby, they dug the grave of 
idealism and cleared the road for materialism. 

Certain semi-Marxists interpreted this as meaning 
that consciousness, ideas, are of very little importance 
in life. 

The great importance of ideas had to be proved. 

And so Engels came forward and, in his letters 
(1891-94), emphasised that while it is true that ideas do 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 121 

not drop from the skies but are engendered by life itself, 
yet once born, ideas acquire great importance, for they 
unite men, organise them, and put their impress upon 
the social life which has engendered them — ideas are of 
great importance in historical progress. 

"This is not Marxism but the betrayal of Marxism," 
shouted Bernstein and his ilk. The Marxists only 
laughed. 

There were semi-Marxists in Russia — the "Econo- 
mists." They asserted that, since ideas are engendered 
by social life, socialist consciousness is of little impor- 
tance for the working-class movement. 

It had to be proved that socialist consciousness 
is of great importance for the working-class movement, 
that without it the movement would be aimless trade- 
unionist wandering, and nobody could say when the 
proletariat would rid itself of it and reach the social 
revolution. 

And Iskra appeared and magnificently accom- 
plished this task. The book What Is To Be Done? ap- 
peared, in which Lenin emphasised the great importance 
of socialist consciousness. The Party "majority" was 
formed and firmly took this path. 

But here the little Bernsteins come out and begin 
to shout: This "fundamentally contradicts Marxism"! 

But do you, little "Economists," know what Marx- 
ism is? 



Surprising! — the reader will say. What's the mat- 
ter? — he will ask. Why did Plekhanov write his article 
criticising Lenin (see the new Iskra, Nos. 70, 71)? What 



122 J. V. STALIN 



is he censuring the "majority" for? Are not the pseudo- 
Marxists of Tiilis and their Social-Democrat repeating 
the ideas expressed by Plekhanov? Yes, they are repeat- 
ing them, but in such a clumsy way that it becomes 
disgusting. Yes, Plekhanov did criticise. But do you 
know what the point is? Plekhanov does not disagree 
with the "majority" and with Lenin. And not only 
Plekhanov. Neither Martov, nor Zasulich, nor Axelrod 
disagree with them. Actually, on the question we have 
been discussing, the leaders of the "minority" do not 
disagree with the old Iskra. And the old Iskra is the 
banner of the "majority." Don't be surprised! Here are 
the facts: 

We are familiar with the old Iskra' s programmatic 
article (see above). We know that that article fully ex- 
presses the stand taken by the "majority." Whose article 
is it? The article of the editorial board of Iskra of that 
time. Who were the members of that editorial board? 
Lenin, Plekhanov, Axelrod, Martov, Zasulich and Sta- 
rover. Of these only Lenin now belongs to the "majority"; 
the other five are the leaders of the "minority"; but the 
fact remains that they were the editors of Iskra' s pro- 
grammatic article, consequently, they ought not to repu- 
diate their own words; presumably they believed what 
they wrote. 

But we shall leave Iskra if you like. 

Here is what Martov writes: 

"Thus, the idea of socialism first arose not among 
the masses of the workers, but in the studies of scholars 
from the ranks of the bourgeoisie." 



Martov, The Red Flag, p. 3. 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 123 

And here is what Vera Zasulich writes: 

"Even the idea of the class solidarity of the entire 
proletariat ... is not so simple that it could arise in- 
dependently in the mind of every worker. . . . And social- 
ism . . . most certainly does not spring up in the minds 
of the workers 'automatically.' . . . The ground for the 
theory of socialism was prepared by the entire develop- 
ment of both life and knowledge . . . and created by the 
mind of a genius who was armed with that knowledge. 
Similarly, the dissemination of the ideas of socialism 
among the workers was initiated, almost over the entire 
continent of Europe, by Socialists who had received 
their training in educational establishments for the 
upper classes."* 

Let us now hear Plekhanov, who so pompously and 
solemnly criticises Lenin in the new Iskra (Nos. 70, 71). 
The scene is the Second Party Congress. Plekhanov is 
arguing against Martynov and defending Lenin. He cen- 
sures Martynov, who had seized on a single sentence 
of Lenin's and had overlooked the book What Is To Be 
Done? as a whole, and goes on to say: 

"Comrade Martynov's trick reminds me of a censor 
who said: 'Permit me to tear a sentence from the Lord's 
Prayer from its context and I will prove to you that its 
author deserves to be hanged.' But all the reproaches 
hurled at this unfortunate sentence (Lenin's) not only by 
Comrade Martynov but also by many, many others, are 
based on a misunderstanding. Comrade Martynov quotes 
the words of Engels: 'Modern socialism is the theoreti- 
cal expression of the modern working-class movement.' 



Zaryar No. 4, pp. 79-80. 



124 J. V. STALIN 



Comrade Lenin also agrees with Engels. . . . But 
Engels's words are a general proposition. The question 
is, who first formulates this theoretical expression? 
Lenin did not write a treatise on the philosophy of his- 
tory but a polemical article against the 'Economists,' 
who said: we must wait and see what the working class 
arrives at by its own efforts without the aid of the 'revo- 
lutionary bacillus' (i.e., without Social-Democracy) . 
The latter was prohibited from telling the workers any- 
thing, precisely because it is a 'revolutionary bacil- 
lus,' i.e., because it possesses theoretical consciousness. 
But if you eliminate the 'bacillus,' all that remains 
is the unconscious mass, into which consciousness must 
be introduced from outside. Had you wanted to be fair to 
Lenin, and had you carefully read his whole book, you 
would have seen that that is precisely what he says."* 

That is what Plekhanov said at the Second Party 
Congress. 

And now, several months later, the same Plekhanov, 
instigated by the same Martov, Axelrod, Zasulich, 
Starover and others, speaks again, and seizing on 
the very same sentence of Lenin's that he defended at 
the congress, says: Lenin and the "majority" are not 
Marxists. He knows that even if a sentence from the 
Lord's Prayer is torn from its context and interpreted 
separately, the author of the Prayer might find himself 
on the gallows for heresy. He knows that this 
would be unfair, that an unbiassed critic would not do 
such a thing; nevertheless, he tears this sentence from 
Lenin's book; nevertheless he acts unfairly, and publicly 



Minutes of the Second Party Congress, p. 123. 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 125 

besmirches himself. And Martov, Zasulich, Axelrod and 
Starover pander to him and publish his article under 
their editorship in the new Iskra (Nos. 70, 71), and 
thereby disgrace themselves once again. 

Why did they exhibit such spinelessness? Why did 
these leaders of the "minority" besmirch themselves? 
Why did they repudiate the programmatic article in 
Iskra to which they themselves had subscribed? Why did 
they repudiate their own words? Has such falsity ever 
before been heard of in the Social-Democratic Party? 

What happened during the few months that elapsed 
between the Second Congress and the appearance of 
Plekhanov's article? 

What happened was this: Of the six editors, the Sec- 
ond Congress elected only three to be editors of Iskra: 
Plekhanov, Lenin and Martov. As for Axelrod, Starover 
and Zasulich — the congress appointed them to other 
posts. It goes without saying that the congress had a 
right to do this, and it was the duty of everyone to submit 
to it; the congress expresses the will of the Party, it is the 
supreme organ of the Party, and whoever acts contrary 
to its decisions tramples upon the will of the Party. 

But these obstinate editors did not submit to the will 
of the Party, to Party discipline (Party discipline is 
the same as the will of the Party). It would appear 
that Party discipline was invented only for simple Party 
workers like us! They were angry with the congress for 
not electing them as editors; they stepped to the side, 
took Martov with them, and formed an opposition. 
They proclaimed a boycott against the Party, refused 
to carry on any Party activities and began to threaten 
the Party. Elect us, they said, to the editorial board, to 



126 J. V. STALIN 



the Central Committee and to the Party Council, 
otherwise we shall cause a split. And a split ensued. Thus 
they trampled upon the will of the Party once again. 

Here are the demands of the striker-editors: 

"The old editorial board of Iskra to be restored (i.e., 
give us three seats on the editorial board). 

"A definite number of members of the opposition 
(i.e., of the "minority") to be installed in the Central 
Committee . 

"Two seats in the Party Council to be allocated to 
members of the opposition, etc. . . . 

"We present these terms as the only ones that will 
enable the Party to avoid a conflict which will threaten 
its very existence" (i.e., satisfy our demands, other- 
wise we shall cause a big split in the Party).* 

What did the Party say to them in reply? 

The Party's representative, the Central Committee, 
and other comrades said to them: We cannot go against 
the decisions of the Party congress; elections are a mat- 
ter for the congress; nevertheless, we shall endeavour 
to restore peace and harmony, although, to tell the truth, 
it is disgraceful to fight for seats; you want to split the 
Party /or the sake of seats, etc. 

The striker-editors took offence; they were embar- 
rassed — indeed, it did look as though they had started 
the fight for the sake of seats; they pulled Plekhanov 
over to their side** and launched their heroic cause. 



* Commentary on the Minutes of the League, p. 26. 
** Perhaps the reader will ask how it was possible for Plekha- 
nov to go over to the "minority," that same Plekhanov who had 
been an ardent supporter of the "majority." The fact is that dis- 
agreement arose between him and Lenin. When the "minority" 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 127 

They were obliged to seek some "stronger'' "disagreement" 
between the "majority" and "minority" in order to 
show that they were not fighting for the sake of seats. 
They searched and searched until they found a passage 
in Lenin's book which, if torn from the context and 
interpreted separately, could indeed be cavilled at. 
A happy idea — thought the leaders of the "minority" — 
Lenin is the leader of the "majority," let us discredit 
Lenin and thereby swing the Party to our side. And 
so Plekhanov began to trumpet to the world that "Lenin 
and his followers are not Marxists." True, only yesterday 
they defended the very idea in Lenin's book which they 
are attacking today, but that cannot be helped; an 



flew into a rage and proclaimed the boycott, Plekhanov took the 
stand that it was necessary to yield to them entirely. Lenin did 
not agree with him. Plekhanov gradually began to incline to- 
wards the "minority." Disagreements between the two grew until 
they reached such a pitch that one fine day Plekhanov became 
an opponent of Lenin and the "majority." Here is what Lenin 
writes about this: 

". . . Several days later I, with a member of the Council, 
did indeed go and see Plekhanov and our conversation with 
Plekhanov took the following course: 

"'You know,' said Plekhanov, 'some wives (i.e., the "mi- 
nority") are such shrews that you have to yield to them to avoid 
hysterics and a big public scandal.' 

"'Perhaps,' I answered, 'but we must yield in such a way 
as to remain strong enough to prevent a still bigger "scandal"'" 
(see Commentary on the Minutes of the League, p. 37, where Lenin's 
letter is quoted). ^^ 

Lenin and Plekhanov failed to reach agreement. From that 
moment Plekhanov began moving over to the "minority." 

We have learned from reliable sources that Plekhanov is 
now deserting the "minority" and has already founded his own 
organ, Dnevnik Sotsial-Demokrata?^ 



128 J. V. STALIN 



opportunist is called an opportunist precisely because 
he has no respect for principle. 

That is why they besmirch themselves; that is the 
cause of their falsity. 

But that is not all. 

Some time passed. They saw that nobody was paying 
attention to their agitation against the "majority" and 
Lenin, apart from a few naive persons. They saw that their 
"affairs" were in a bad way and decided to change their 
colours again. On March 10, 1905, the same Plekhanov, 
and the same Martov and Axelrod, in the name of the 
Party Council, passed a resolution in which, among other 
things, they said: 

"Comrades! (addressing themselves to the "major- 
ity"). . . . Both sides (i.e., the "majority" and the "mi- 
nority") have repeatedly expressed the conviction that 
the existing disagreements on tactics and organisation 
are not of such a character as to render impossible ac- 
tivities within a single Party organisation"*; therefore, 
they said, let us convene a comrades' court (consisting 
of Bebel and others) to settle our slight disagreement. 

In short, the disagreements in the Party are merely 
a squabble, which a comrades' court will investigate, 
but we are a united whole. 

But how can that be? We "non-Marxists" are invited 
into the Party organisations, we are a united whole, and 
so on and so forth. . . . What does it mean? Why, you 
leaders of the "minority" are betraying the Party! Can 
"non-Marxists" be put at the head of the Party? Is there 
room for "non-Marxists" in the ranks of the Social- 



Iskra, No. 91, p. 3. 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 129 

Democratic Party? Or, perhaps, you, too, have betrayed 
the cause of Marxism and have, therefore, changed front? 

But it would be naive to expect a reply. The point 
is that these wonderful leaders have several "principles" 
in their pockets, and whenever they want a particular 
one they take it out. As the saying goes: They have a 
different opinion for every day in the week! . . . 

Such are the leaders of the so-called "minority." 

It is easy to picture to oneself what the tail of this 
leadership — the so-called Tiflis "minority" — is like. . . . 
The trouble also is that at times the tail pays no heed 
to the head and refuses to obey. For example, while the 
leaders of the "minority" consider that conciliation is 
possible and call for harmony among the Party workers, 
the Tiflis "minority" and its Social-Democrat continue 
to rave and shout: between the "majority" and "minor- 
ity" there is "a life-and-death struggle"*; we must 
exterminate each other! They are all at sixes and sevens. 

The "minority" complain that we call them oppor- 
tunist (unprincipled). But what else can we call them 
if they repudiate their own words, if they swing from 
side to side, if they are eternally wavering and hesitat- 
ing? Can a genuine Social-Democrat change his opin- 
ions every now and again? The "minority" change 
theirs more often than one changes pocket handkerchiefs. 

Our pseudo-Marxists obstinately reiterate that the 
"minority" is truly proletarian in character. Is that so? 
Let us see. 

Kautsky says that "it is easier for the proletarian 
to become imbued with Party principles, he inclines 



See Social-Democrat, No. 1. 



130 J. V. STALIN 



towards a principled policy that is independent of the 
mood of the moment and of personal or local interests."* 

But what about the "minority"? Is it inclined to- 
wards a policy that is independent of the mood of the 
moment, etc.? On the contrary: it is always hesitating, 
eternally wavering; it detests a firm principled policy, 
it prefers unprincipledness; it follows the mood of the 
moment. We are already familiar with the facts. 

Kautsky says that the proletarian likes Party disci- 
pline: "The proletarian is a nonentity so long as he remains 
an isolated individual. His strength, his progress, his 
hopes and expectations are entirely derived from organ- 
isation. ..." That is why he is not distracted by person- 
al advantage or personal glory; he "performs his duty 
in any post he is assigned to with a voluntary discipline 
which pervades all his feelings and thoughts."** 

But what about the "minority"? Is it, too, imbued 
with a sense of discipline? On the contrary, it despises 
Party discipline and ridicules it.*** The first to set an 
example in violating Party discipline were the leaders 
of the "minority." Recall Axelrod, Zasulich, Starover, 
Martov and others, who refused to submit to the deci- 
sion of the Second Congress. 

"Quite different is the case of the intellectual," 
continues Kautsky. He finds it extremely difficult to 
submit to Party discipline and does so by compulsion, 
not of his own free will. "He recognises the need of 



* The Erfurt Programme, published by the Central Commit- 
tee, p. 88. 

** See Lenin, One Step Forward, Two Steps Back, p. 93, where 
these words of Kautsky's are quoted. 
*** See Minutes of the League. 



BRIEFLY ABOUT THE DISAGREEMENTS IN THE PARTY 131 

discipline only for the mass, not for the chosen few. 
And of course, he counts himself among these few. . . . 
An ideal example of an intellectual who had become 
thoroughly imbued with the sentiments of the proletariat, 
and who . . . worked in any post he was assigned 
to, subordinated himself whole-heartedly to our great 
cause, and despised the spineless whining . . . which the 
intellectual ... is all too prone to indulge in when 
he happens to be in the minority — an ideal example of 
such an intellectual . . . was Liebknecht. We may also 
mention Marx, who never forced himself to the fore- 
front and whose Party discipline in the International, 
where he often found himself in the minority, was 
exemplary."* 

But what about the "minority"? Does it display any- 
thing of the "sentiments of the proletariat"? Is its conduct 
anything like that of Liebknecht and Marx? On the con- 
trary, we have seen that the leaders of the "minority" 
have not subordinated their "ego" to our sacred cause; 
we have seen that it was these leaders who indulged in 
"spineless whining when they found themselves in the 
minority" at the Second Congress; we have seen that 
it was they who, after the congress, wailed for "front 
seats," and that it was they who started a Party split 
for the sake of these seats. . . . 

Is this your "proletarian character," esteemed Men- 
sheviks? 

Then why are the workers on our side in some towns? 
the Mensheviks ask us. 



* See Lenin, One Step Forward, Two Steps Back, p. 93, where 
these lines of Kautsky's are quoted. 



132 J. V. STALIN 



Yes, it is true, in some towns the workers are on the 
side of the "minority," but that proves nothing. Workers 
even follow the revisionists (the opportunists in Germany) 
in some towns, but that does not prove that their stand 
is a proletarian one; it does not prove that they are not 
opportunists. One day a crow found a rose, but that 
did not prove that a crow is a nightingale. It is not for 
nothing that the saying goes: 

When a crow picks up a rose 
'"'I'm a nightingale,''' it crows. 



It is now clear on what grounds the disagreements in 
the Party arose. As is evident, two trends have appeared 
in our Party: the trend of proletarian firmness, and 
the trend of intellectual wavering. And this intellectual 
wavering is expressed by the present "minority." The 
Tiflis "Committee" and its Social-Democrat are the 
obedient slaves of this "minority"! 

That is the whole point. 

True, our pseudo-Marxists often shout that they are 
opposed to the "mentality of the intellectual," and 
they accuse the "majority" of "intellectual wavering"; 
but this reminds us of the case of the thief who stole 
some money and began to shout: "Stop thief!" 

Moreover, it is well known that the tongue ever 
turns to the aching tooth. 

Reproduced from the pamphlet 
published by the Caucasian Union 
Committee of the R.S.D.L.R, May 1905 

Translated from the Georgian 



ARMED INSURRECTION AND OUR TACTICS 



The revolutionary movement "has already brought 
about the necessity for an armed uprising" — this 
idea, expressed by the Third Congress of our Party, 
finds increasing confirmation day after day. The flames 
of revolution are flaring up with ever-increasing inten- 
sity, now here and now there calling forth local upris- 
ings. The three days' barricade and street fighting in 
Lodz, the strike of many tens of thousands of workers 
in Ivanovo-Voznesensk with the inevitable bloody col- 
lisions with the troops, the uprising in Odessa, the "mu- 
tiny" in the Black Sea Fleet and in the Libau naval 
depot, and the "week" in Tiflis — are all harbingers of 
the approaching storm. It is approaching, approaching 
irresistibly, it will break over Russia any day and, 
in a mighty, cleansing flood, sweep away all that is 
antiquated and rotten; it will wipe out the disgrace 
called the autocracy, under which the Russian people 
have suffered for ages. The last convulsive efforts of 
tsarism — the intensification of repression of every kind, 
the proclamation of martial law over half the country and 
the multiplication of gallows, all accompanied by allur- 
ing speeches addressed to the liberals and by false 
promises of reform — these things will not save-it from 



134 J. V. STALIN 



the fate history has in store for it. The days of the autoc- 
racy are numbered; the storm is inevitable. A new 
social order is already being born, welcomed by the en- 
tire people, who are expecting renovation and regen- 
eration from it. 

What new questions is this approaching storm rais- 
ing before our Party? How must we adjust our organ- 
isation and tactics to the new requirements of life 
so that we may take a more active and organised part 
in the uprising, which is the only necessary beginning 
of the revolution? To guide the uprising, should we — the 
advanced detachment of the class which is not only the 
vanguard, but also the main driving force of the revo- 
lution — set up special bodies, or is the existing Party 
machinery enough? 

These questions have been confronting the Party 
and demanding immediate solution for several months 
already. For those who worship "spontaneity," who de- 
grade the Party's objects to the level of simply following 
in the wake of life, who drag at the tail and do not march 
at the head as the advanced class-conscious detach- 
ment should do, such questions do not exist. Insurrection 
is spontaneous, they say, it is impossible to organise and 
prepare it, every prearranged plan of action is a Utopia 
(they are opposed to any sort of "plan" — why, that is 
"consciousness" and not a "spontaneous phenomenon"!), 
a waste of effort — social life follows its own, unknown 
paths and will shatter all our projects. Hence, they say, 
we must confine ourselves to conducting propaganda and 
agitation in favour of the idea of insurrection, the idea 
of the "self-arming" of the masses; we must only exercise 
"political guidance"; as regards "technical" guidance of 



ARMED INSURRECTION AND OUR TACTICS 135 

the insurgent people, let anybody who likes undertake 
that. 

But we have always exercised such guidance up to 
now! — the opponents of the "khvostist policy" reply. 
Wide agitation and propaganda, political guidance of 
the proletariat, are absolutely essential. That goes with- 
out saying. But to confine ourselves to such general 
tasks means either evading an answer to the question 
which life bluntly puts to us, or revealing utter inability 
to adjust our tactics to the requirements of the rapidly 
growing revolutionary struggle. We must, of course, 
now intensify political agitation tenfold, we must try 
to establish our influence not only over the proletariat, 
but also over those numerous strata of the "people" who 
are gradually joining the revolution; we must try to popu- 
larise among all classes of the population the idea that 
an uprising is necessary. But we cannot confine our- 
selves solely to this! To enable the proletariat to utilise 
the impending revolution for the purposes of its own 
class struggle, to enable it to establish a democratic 
system that will provide the greatest guarantees for the 
subsequent struggle for socialism — it, the proletariat, 
around which the opposition is rallying, must not only 
be in the centre of the struggle, but become the leader 
and guide of the uprising. It is the technical guidance 
and organisational preparation of the all-Russian upris- 
ing that constitute the new tasks with which life 
has confronted the proletariat. And if our Party wishes 
to be the real political leader of the working class it 
cannot and must not repudiate these new tasks. 

And so, what must we do to achieve this object? What 
must our first steps be? 



136 J. V. STALIN 



Many of our organisations have already answered 
this question in a practical way by directing part of 
their forces and resources to the purpose of arming the 
proletariat. Our struggle against the autocracy has en- 
tered the stage when the necessity of arming is univer- 
sally admitted. But mere realisation of the necessity of 
arming is not enough — the practical task must be bluntly 
and clearly put before the Party. Hence, our committees 
must at once, forthwith, proceed to arm the people locally, 
to set up special groups to arrange this matter, to organise 
district groups for the purpose of procuring arms, to 
organise workshops for the manufacture of different 
kinds of explosives, to draw up plans for seizing state 
and private stores of arms and arsenals. We must not 
only arm the people "with a burning desire to arm them- 
selves," as the new Iskra advises us, but also "take the most 
energetic measures to arm the proletariat" in actual fact, 
as the Third Party Congress made it incumbent upon us 
to do. It is easier on this issue than on any other to reach 
agreement with the section that has split off from the 
Party (if it is really in earnest about arming and is not 
merely talking about "a burning desire to arm them- 
selves"), as well as with the national Social-Democratic 
organisations, such as, for example, the Armenian Fed- 
eralists and others who have set themselves the same 
object. Such an attempt has already been made in Baku, 
where after the February massacre our committee, the 
Balakhany-Bibi-Eibat group and the Gnchak Committee^' 
set up among themselves an organising committee for 
procuring arms. It is absolutely essential that this diffi- 
cult and responsible undertaking be organised by joint 
efforts, and we believe that factional interests should 



ARMED INSURRECTION AND OUR TACTICS 137 

least of all hinder the amalgamation of all the Social- 
Democratic forces on this ground. 

In addition to increasing stocks of arms and organis- 
ing their procurement and manufacture, it is necessary 
to devote most serious attention to the task of organis- 
ing fighting squads of every kind for the purpose of 
utilising the arms that are being procured. Under no 
circumstances should actions such as distributing arms 
directly to the masses be resorted to. In view of the 
fact that our resources are limited and that it is extreme- 
ly difficult to conceal weapons from the vigilant eyes 
of the police, we shall be unable to arm any considerable 
section of the population, and all our efforts will be 
wasted. It will be quite different when we set up a spe- 
cial fighting organisation. Our fighting squads will learn 
to handle their weapons, and during the uprising — 
irrespective of whether it breaks out spontaneously or 
is prepared beforehand — they will come out as the chief 
and leading units around which the insurgent people 
will rally, and under whose leadership they will march 
into battle. Thanks to their experience and organisation, 
and also to the fact that they will be well armed, it will 
be possible to utilise all the forces of the insurgent people 
and thereby achieve the immediate object — the arming 
of the entire people and the execution of the prearranged 
plan of action. They will quickly capture various stores 
of arms, government and public offices, the post office, 
the telephone exchange, and so forth, which will be neces- 
sary for the further development of the revolution. 

But these fighting squads will be needed not only 
when the revolutionary uprising has already spread 
over the whole town; their role will be no less important 



138 J. V. STALIN 



on the eve of the uprising. During the past six months it 
has become convincingly clear to us that the autoc- 
racy, which has discredited itself in the eyes of all classes 
of the population, has concentrated all its energy 
on mobilising the dark forces of the country — profes- 
sional hooligans, or the ignorant and fanatical elements 
among the Tatars — for the purpose of fighting the revo- 
lutionaries. Armed and protected by the police, they are 
terrorising the population and creating a tense atmosphere 
for the liberation movement. Our fighting organisations 
must always be ready to offer due resistance to all the 
attempts made by these dark forces, and must try to 
convert the anger and the resistance called forth by their 
actions into an anti-government movement. The armed 
fighting squads, ready to go out into the streets and take 
their place at the head of the masses of the people at 
any moment, can easily achieve the object set by the 
Third Congress — "to organise armed resistance to the ac- 
tions of the Black Hundreds, and generally, of all reac- 
tionary elements led by the government" ("Resolu- 
tion on Attitude Towards the Government's Tactics on 
the Eve of the Revolution" — see "Announcement").'^'' 

One of the main tasks of our fighting squads, and of 
military-technical organisation in general, should be 
to draw up the plan of the uprising for their particular 
districts and co-ordinate it with the plan drawn up by 
the Party centre for the whole of Russia. Ascertain the 
enemy's weakest spots, choose the points from which 
the attack against him is to be launched, distribute 
all the forces over the district and thoroughly study the 
topography of the town — all this must be done before- 
hand, so that we shall not be taken by surprise under 



ARMED INSURRECTION AND OUR TACTICS 139 

any circumstances. It is totally inappropriate here to 
go into a detailed analysis of this aspect of our organi- 
sations' activity. Strict secrecy in drawing up the plan 
of action must be accompanied by the widest possible dis- 
semination among the proletariat of military-technical 
knowledge which is absolutely necessary for conducting 
street fighting. For this purpose we must utilise the serv- 
ices of the military men in the organisation. For this 
purpose also we must utilise the services of a number 
of other comrades who will be extremely useful in this 
matter because of their natural talent and inclinations. 

Only such thorough preparation for insurrection can 
ensure for Social-Democracy the leading role in the forth- 
coming battles between the people and the autocracy. 

Only complete fighting preparedness will enable the 
proletariat to transform the isolated clashes with the 
police and the troops into a nation-wide uprising 
with the object of setting up a provisional revolutionary 
government in place of the tsarist government. 

The supporters of the "khvostist policy" notwith- 
standing, the organised proletariat will exert all its 
efforts to concentrate both the technical and political 
leadership of the uprising in its own hands. This 
leadership is the essential condition which will enable 
us to utilise the impending revolution in the interests 
of our class struggle. 

Proletariatis Brdzola 

(The Proletarian Struggle), No. 10, 

July 15, 1905 

Unsigned 

Translated from the Georgian 



THE PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY 
GOVERNMENT AND SOCIAL-DEMOCRACY^ 



The people's revolution is gaining impetus. The pro- 
letariat is arming and raising the banner of revolt. The 
peasantry are straightening their backs and rallying 
around the proletariat. The time is not far distant when 
the general uprising will break out, and the hated throne 
of the hated tsar will be "swept from the face of the earth." 
The tsarist government will be overthrown. On its ruins 
will be set up the government of the revolution — the 
provisional revolutionary government, which will disarm 
the dark forces, arm the people and immediately proceed 
to convoke a Constituent Assembly. Thus, the rule of 
the tsar will give way to the rule of the people. That is the 
path which the people's revolution is now taking. 

What must the provisional government do? 

It must disarm the dark forces, curb the enemies of 
the revolution so that they shall not be able to restore 
the tsarist autocracy. It must arm the people and help 
to carry the revolution through to the end. It must intro- 
duce freedom of speech, of the press, of assembly, and so 
forth. It must abolish indirect taxes and introduce a pro- 
gressive profits tax and progressive death duties. It must 



PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY GOVERNMENT AND S.-D 141 

organise peasant committees which will settle the land 
question in the countryside. It must also disestablish 
the church and secularise education. . . . 

In addition to these general demands, the provisional 
government must also satisfy the class demands of the 
workers: freedom to strike and freedom of associa- 
tion, the eight-hour day, state insurance for workers, 
hygienic conditions of labour, establishment of "labour 
exchanges," and so forth. 

In short, the provisional government must fully carry 
out our minimum programme* and immediately proceed 
to convene a popular Constituent Assembly which will 
give "perpetual" legal force to the changes that will have 
taken place in social life. 

Who should constitute the provisional government? 

The revolution will be brought about by the people, 
and the people are the proletariat and the peasantry. 
Clearly, it is they who should undertake the task of 
carrying the revolution through to the end, of curbing the 
reaction, of arming the people, and so forth. To achieve 
all this the proletariat and the peasantry must have cham- 
pions of their interests in the provisional government. 
The proletariat and the peasantry will dominate in the 
streets, they will shed their blood — clearly therefore, 
they should dominate in the provisional government too. 

All this is true, we are told; but what is there in 
common between the proletariat and the peasantry? 

Common between them is their hatred of the sur- 
vivals of serfdom, the life-and-death struggle they are 



* For the minimum programme see "Announcement About 
the Second Congress of the R.S.D.L.P." 



142 J. V. STALIN 



waging against the tsarist government, their desire for 
a democratic republic. 

This, however, cannot make us forget the truth that 
the differences between them are much greater. 

What are these differences? 

That the proletariat is the enemy of private property, 
it hates the bourgeois system, and it needs a democratic 
republic only in order to muster its forces for the purpose 
of overthrowing the bourgeois regime, whereas the 
peasantry are tied to private property, are bound to the 
bourgeois system, and need, a democratic republic in 
order to strengthen the foundations of the bourgeois 
regime. 

Needless to say the peasantry* will go against the 
proletariat only in so far as the proletariat will want 
to abolish private property. On the other hand, it is 
also clear that the peasantry will support the proletariat 
only in so far as the proletariat will want to overthrow 
the autocracy. The present revolution is a bourgeois 
revolution, i.e., it does not affect private property, 
hence, at present the peasantry have no reason for turn- 
ing their weapons against the proletariat. But the pre- 
sent revolution totally rejects tsarist rule, hence, it is in 
the peasants' interests resolutely to join the prole- 
tariat, the leading force of the revolution. Clearly, also, 
it is in the proletariat's interests to support the peasantry 
and jointly with them attack the common enemy — the 
tsarist government. It is not for nothing that the great 
Engels says that before the victory of the democratic 
revolution the proletariat must attack the existing system 



* i.e., the petty bourgeoisie. 



PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY GOVERNMENT AND S.-D 143 

side by side with the petty bourgeoisie.* And if our 
victory cannot be called a victory until the enemies 
of the revolution are completely curbed, if it is the duty 
of the provisional government to curb the enemy and 
arm the people, if the provisional government must 
undertake the task of consummating the victory — then 
it is self-evident that, in addition to those who champion 
the interests of the petty bourgeoisie, the provisional 
government must include representatives of the pro- 
letariat to champion its interests. It would be sheer lu- 
nacy if the proletariat, acting as the leader of the revolu- 
tion left it entirely to the petty bourgeoisie to carry the 
revolution to its end: this would be self-betrayal. It must 
not be forgotten, however, that the proletariat, as the 
enemy of private property, must have its own party, and 
must not turn aside from its path for a single moment. 

In other words, the proletariat and the peasantry 
must by their combined efforts put an end to the tsarist 
government; by their combined efforts they must curb the 
enemies of the revolution, and precisely for this reason 
not only the peasantry, but the proletariat also must 
have champions of its interests — Social-Democrats — in 
the provisional government. 

This is so clear and obvious that one would think 
it would be unnecessary to talk about it. 

But out steps the "minority" and, having doubts 
about this, obstinately reiterates: it is unbecoming for 
Social-Democracy to be represented in the provisional 
government, it is contrary to principles. 



* See Iskra, No. 96. This passage is reproduced in Social- 
Democrat, No. 5. See "Democracy and Social-Democracy." 



144 J. V. STALIN 



Let us examine this question. What are the argu- 
ments of the "minority"? First of all, they refer to the 
Amsterdam Congress/^ This congress, in opposition to 
Jauresism, passed a resolution to the effect that Social- 
ists must not seek representation in bourgeois govern- 
ments; and as the provisional government will be a bour- 
geois government, it will be improper for us to be repre- 
sented in it. That is how the "minority" argues, failing 
to realise that if the decision of the congress is to be 
interpreted in this schoolboy fashion we should take no 
part in the revolution either. It works out like this: we are 
enemies of the bourgeoisie; the present revolution is 
a bourgeois revolution — hence, we should take no part 
in this revolution! This is the path to which the logic 
of the "minority" is pushing us. Social-Democracy says, 
however, that we proletarians should not only take part 
in the present revolution, but also be at the head of it, 
guide it, and carry it through to the end. But it will be 
impossible to carry the revolution through to the end 
unless we are represented in the provisional government. 
Obviously, the logic of the "minority" has not a leg to 
stand on. One of two things: either we, copying the liberals, 
must reject the idea that the proletariat is the leader of the 
revolution — and in that case the question of our going 
into the provisional government automatically falls away; 
or we must openly recognise this Social-Democratic idea 
and thereby recognise the necessity of our going into 
the provisional government. The "minority," however, 
do not wish to break with either side; they wish to be 
both liberal and Social-Democratic! How pitilessly they 
are outraging innocent logic. . . . 

The Amsterdam Congress, however, had in mind the 



PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY GOVERNMENT AND S.-D 145 

permanent government of France and not a provisional 
revolutionary government. The government of France 
is a reactionary, conservative government; it protects 
the old and fights the new — it goes without saying that 
no true Social-Democrat will join such a government; 
but a provisional government is revolutionary and pro- 
gressive; it fights the old and clears the road for the 
new, it serves the interests of the revolution — and it 
goes without saying that the true Social-Democrat will 
go into such a government and take an active part in 
consummating the cause of the revolution. As you see — 
these are different things. Consequently, it is useless for 
the "minority" to clutch at the Amsterdam Congress: 
that will not save it. 

Evidently, the "minority" realises this itself and, 
therefore, comes out with another argument: it appeals 
to the shades of Marx and Engels. Thus, for example, 
Social-Democrat obstinately reiterates that Marx and 
Engels "emphatically repudiated" the idea of entering 
a provisional government. But where and when did they 
repudiate this? What does Marx say, for example? It 
appears that Marx says that ". . . the democratic petty 
bourgeois . . . preach to the proletariat . . . the establish- 
ment of a large opposition party which will embrace all 
shades of opinion in the democratic party . . ." that 
"such a union would turn out solely to their (the petty 
bourgeois) advantage and altogether to the disadvantage 
of the proletariat,"* etc."*^ In short, the proletariat must 
have a separate class party. But who is opposed to this, 
"learned critic"? Why are you tilling at windmills? 



See Social-Democrat, No. 5. 



146 J. V. STALIN 



Nevertheless, the "critic" goes on quoting Marx. 
"In the case of a struggle against a common adversary 
no special union is required. As soon as such an adversary 
has to be fought directly, the interests of both parties, 
for the moment, coincide, and . . . this association, 
calculated to last only for the moment, will arise of 
itself. . . . During the struggle and after the struggle, 
the workers must, at every opportunity, put forward 
their own needs (it ought to be: demands) alongside 
of the needs (demands) of the bourgeois democrats. . . . 
In a word, from the first moment of victory, mistrust 
must be directed . . . against the workers' previous 
allies, against the party that wishes to exploit the com- 
mon victory for itself alone."* In other words, the pro- 
letariat must pursue its own road and support the petty 
bourgeoisie only in so far as this does not run counter 
to its own interests. But who is opposed to this, aston- 
ishing "critic"? And why did you have to refer to the 
words of Marx? Does Marx say anything about a pro- 
visional revolutionary government? Not a word! Does 
Marx say that entering a provisional government during 
the democratic revolution is opposed to our principles? 
Not a word! Why then does our author go into such 
childish raptures? Where did he dig up this "contra- 
diction in principle" between us and Marx? Poor "critic"! 
He puffs and strains in the effort to find such a contra- 
diction, but to his chagrin nothing comes of it. 

What does Engels say according to the Mensheviks? 
It appears that in a letter to Turati he says that the im- 
pending revolution in Italy will be a petty bourgeois 
and not a socialist revolution; that before its victory the 



See Social-Democrat, No. 5. 



PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY GOVERNMENT AND S.-D 147 

proletariat must come out against the existing regime 
jointly with the petty bourgeoisie, but must, without 
fail, have its own party; that it would be extremely 
dangerous for the Socialists to enter the new government 
after the victory of the revolution. If they did that they 
would repeat the blunder made by Louis Blanc and 
other French Socialists in 1848, etc.* In other words, 
in so far as the Italian revolution will be a democratic 
and not a socialist revolution it would be a great mistake 
to dream of the rule of the proletariat and remain in the 
government after the victory; only before the victory can 
the proletariat come out jointly with the petty bourgeoisie 
against the common enemy. But who is arguing against 
this? Who says that we must confuse the democratic 
revolution with the socialist revolution? What was the 
purpose of referring to Turati, a follower of Bernstein? 
Or why was it necessary to recall Louis Blanc? Louis 
Blanc was a petty-bourgeois "Socialist"; we are discuss- 
ing Social-Democrats. There was no Social-Democratic 
Party in Louis Blanc's time, but here we are discussing 
precisely such a party. The French Socialists had in 
view the conquest of political power; what interests 
us here is the question of entering a provisional govern- 
ment. . . . Did Engels say that entering a provisional 
government during a democratic revolution is opposed 
to our principles? He said nothing of the kind! Then 
what is all this talk about, Mr. Menshevik? How is it 
you fail to understand that to confuse questions is not 



* See Social-Democrat, No. 5. Social-Democrat gives these 
words in quotation marks. One would tliink that these words 
of Engels are quoted literally, but this is not the case. The 
author merely gives in his own words the gist of Engels's letter. 



148 J. V. STALIN 



to solve them? And why did you have to trouble the 
shades of Marx and Engels for nothing? 

Evidently, the "minority" realises that the names 
of Marx and Engels will not save it, and so now it 
clutches at a third "argument." You want to put a double 
curb on the enemies of the revolution, the "minority" 
tells us. You want the "pressure of the proletariat upon 
the revolution to come not only from 'below,' not only 
from the streets, but also from above, from the chambers 
of the provisional government."* But this is opposed to 
principle, the "minority" tells us reproachfully. 

Thus, the "minority" asserts that we must influ- 
ence the course of the revolution "only from below." 
The "majority," however, is of the opinion that we 
must supplement action from "below" with action from 
"above" in order that the pressure should come from 
all sides. 

Who, then, is opposing the principle of Social- 
Democracy, the "majority" or the "minority"? 

Let us turn to Engels. In the seventies an upris- 
ing broke out in Spain. The question of a provisional 
revolutionary government came up. At that time the 
Bakuninists (Anarchists) were active there. They repu- 
diated all action from above, and this gave rise to a 
controversy between them and Engels. The Bakuninists 
preached the very thing that the "minority" are say- 
ing today. "The Bakuninists," says Engels, "for years 
had been propagating the idea that all revolutionary ac- 
tion from above downward was pernicious, and that 
everything must be organised and carried out from below 



See Iskra, No. 93. 



PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY GOVERNMENT AND S.-D 149 

upward."* In their opinion, "every organisation of a 
political, so-called provisional or revolutionary power, 
could only be a new fraud and would be as dangerous 
to the proletariat as all now existing governments."** 
Engels ridicules this view and says that life has ruthlessly 
refuted this doctrine of the Bakuninists. The Bakuninists 
were obliged to yield to the demands of life and they . . . 
"wholly against their anarchist principles, had to form 
a revolutionary government."*** Thus, they "trampled 
upon the dogma which they had only just proclaimed: 
that the establishment of the revolutionary government 
was only a deception and a new betrayal of the working 
class."**** 

This is what Engels says. 

It turns out, therefore, that the principle of the 
"minority" — action only from "below" — is an anarchist 
principle, which does, indeed, fundamentally contradict 
Social-Democratic tactics. The view of the "minority" 
that participation in a provisional government in any 
way would be fatal to the workers is an anarchist phrase, 
which Engels ridiculed in his day. It also turns out that 
life will refute the views of the "minority" and will 
easily smash them as it did in the case of the Bakuninists. 

The "minority," however, persists in its obstinacy — 
we shall not go against our principles, it says. These 
people have a queer idea of what Social-Democratic prin- 
ciples are. Let us take, for example, their principles as 
regards the provisional revolutionary government and 



* See Proletary, No. 3, in which these words of Engels are 
quoted. "*"* 
** Ibid. 
*** Ibid. 
**** Ibid. 



150 J. V. STALIN 



the State Duma. The "minority" is against entering 
a provisional government brought into being in the 
interests of the revolution — this is opposed to principles, 
it says. But it is in favour of entering the State Duma, 
which was brought into being in the interests of the 
autocracy — that, it appears, is not opposed to principles! 
The "minority" is against entering a provisional govern- 
ment which the revolutionary people will set up, and to 
which the people will give legal sanction — that is op- 
posed to principles, it says. But it is in favour of entering 
the State Duma which is convoked by the autocratic 
tsar and to which the tsar gives legal sanction — that, 
it appears, is not opposed to principles! The "minority" 
is against entering a provisional] government whose mis- 
sion it will be to bury the autocracy — that is opposed 
to principles. But it is in favour of entering the State 
Duma, whose mission it is to bolster up the autocracy — 
that, it appears, is not opposed to principles. . . . What 
principles are you talking about, most esteemed gentle- 
men? The principles of the liberals or of the Social- 
Democrats? You would do very well if you gave a straight 
answer to this question. We have our doubts. 

But let us leave these questions. 

The point is that in its quest for principles the "minor- 
ity" has slipped onto the path of the Anarchists. 

That has now become clear. 

II 

Our Mensheviks did not like the resolutions that 
were adopted by the Third Party Congress. Their gen- 
uinely revolutionary meaning stirred up the Menshevik 



PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY GOVERNMENT AND S.-D 151 

"marsh" and stimulated in it an appetite for "criticism." 
Evidently, it was the resolution on the provisional revo- 
lutionary government that mainly disturbed their oppor- 
tunist minds, and they set out to "destroy" it. But as 
they were unable to find anything in it to clutch at and 
criticise, they resorted to their customary and, it must 
be said, cheap weapon — demagogy! This resolution was 
drawn up as a bait for the workers, to deceive and dazzle 
them — write these "critics." And, evidently, they are 
very pleased with the fuss they are making. They imagine 
that they have struck their opponent dead, that they 
are victor-critics, and they exclaim: "And they (the 
authors of the resolution) want to lead the proletariat!" 
You look at these "critics" and before your eyes rises 
the hero in Gogol's story who, in a state of mental aber- 
ration, imagined that he was the King of Spain. Such is 
the fate of all megalomaniacs! 

Let us examine the actual "criticism" which we find 
in Social-Democrat, No. 5. As you know already, our 
Mensheviks cannot think of the bloody spectre of a pro- 
visional revolutionary government without fear and 
trembling, and so they call upon their saints, the Marty- 
novs and Akimovs, to rid them of this monster and to 
replace it by the Zemsky Sobor — now by the State Duma. 
With this object they laud the "Zemsky Sobor" to the 
skies and try to palm off this rotten offspring of rotten 
tsarism as good coin of the realm: "We know that the 
Great French Revolution established a republic without 
having a provisional government," they write. Is that 
all? Don't you know any more than that, "esteemed 
gentlemen"? It is very little! You really ought to know 
a little more! You ought to know, for example, that the 



152 J. V. STALIN 



Great French Revolution triumphed as a bourgeois revo- 
lutionary movement, whereas the Russian "revolutionary 
movement will triumph as the movement of the workers 
or will not triumph at all," as G. Plekhanov quite rightly 
says. In France, the bourgeoisie was at the head of the 
revolution; in Russia, it is the proletariat. There, the 
former guided the destiny of the revolution; here it is 
the latter. And is it not clear that with such a realign- 
ment of the leading revolutionary forces the results 
cannot be identical for the respective classes? If, in 
France, the bourgeoisie, being at the head of the revo- 
lution, reaped its fruits, must it also reap them in Russia, 
notwithstanding the fact that the proletariat stands at 
the head of the revolution? Yes, say our Mensheviks; 
what took place there, in France, must also take place 
here, in Russia. These gentlemen, like undertakers, take 
the measure of one long dead and apply it to the living. 
Moreover, in doing so they resorted to a rather big fraud: 
they cut off the head of the subject that interests us and 
shifted the point of the controversy to its tail. We, like 
all revolutionary Social-Democrats, are talking about 
establishing a democratic republic. They, however, hid 
the word "democratic" and began to talk large about a 
"republic." "We know that the Great French Revolution 
established a republic," they preach. Yes, it established 
a republic, but what kind of republic — a truly democratic 
one? The kind that the Russian Social-Democratic Labour 
Party is demanding? Did that republic grant the people 
the right of universal suffrage? Were the elections at that 
time really direct? Was a progressive income tax intro- 
duced? Was anything said there about improving con- 
ditions of labour, shortening the working day, higher 



PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY GOVERNMENT AND S.-D 153 

wages and so forth? . . . No. There was nothing of the 
kind there, nor could there have been, for at that time 
the workers lacked Social-Democratic education. That 
is why their interests were forgotten and ignored by the 
bourgeoisie in the French republic of that time. And is it 
before such a republic that you bow your "highly re- 
spected" heads, gentlemen? Is this your ideal? You are 
welcome to it! But remember, esteemed gentlemen, that 
worshipping such a republic has nothing in common with 
Social-Democracy and its programme — it is democratism 
of the worst sort. And you are smuggling all this in 
under the label of Social-Democracy. 

Furthermore, the Mensheviks ought to know that 
the Russian bourgeoisie with their Zemsky Sobor will 
not even grant us a republic such as was introduced in 
France — it has no intention whatever of abolishing the 
monarchy. Knowing how "insolent" the workers are 
where there is no monarchy, it is striving to keep this 
fortress intact and to convert it into its own weapon 
against its uncompromising foe — the proletariat. This 
is its object in negotiating in the name of the "people" 
with the butcher-tsar and advising him to convoke a 
Zemsky Sobor in the interests of the "country" and the 
throne, and in order to avert "anarchy." Are you Men- 
sheviks really unaware of all this? 

We need a republic not like the one introduced by 
the French bourgeoisie in the eighteenth century, but 
like the one the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party 
is demanding in the twentieth century. And such a re- 
public can be created only by a victorious popular upris- 
ing, headed by the proletariat, and by the provi- 
sional revolutionary government which it sets up. Only 



154 J. V. STALIN 



such a provisional government can provisionally carry 
out our minimum programme and submit changes of this 
nature for endorsement to the Constituent Assembly 
which it convokes. 

Our "critics" do not believe that a Constituent As- 
sembly convoked in conformity with our programme could 
express the will of the people (and how can they imagine 
this when they go no further than the Great French 
Revolution which occurred 115 or 116 years ago). "Rich 
and influential persons," continue the "critics," "pos- 
sess so many means of wangling the elections in their 
favour that all talk about the actual will of the people 
is absolutely beside the point. To prevent poor voters 
from becoming instruments for expressing the will of 
the rich a tremendous struggle must be waged and a long 
period of Party discipline" (which the Mensheviks do not 
recognise?) "is needed." "All this has not been achieved 
even in Europe (?) in spite of its long period of politi- 
cal training. And yet our Bolsheviks think that this 
talisman lies in the hands of a provisional govern- 
ment!" 

This is khvostism indeed! Here you have a life-size 
picture of "their late majesties" the "tactics-process" 
and the "organisation-process." It is impossible to demand 
in Russia what has not yet been achieved in Europe, the 
"critics" tell us for our edification! But we know that 
our minimum programme has not been fully achieved in 
"Europe," or even in America; consequently, in the 
opinion of the Mensheviks, whoever accepts it and fights 
for its achievement in Russia after the fall of the autoc- 
racy is an incorrigible dreamer, a miserable Don Quixote! 
In short, our minimum programme is false and Utopian, 



PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY GOVERNMENT AND S.-D 155 

and has nothing in common with real "life"! Isn't that 
SO, Messieurs "Critics"? That is what it appears to be 
according to you. But in that case, show more courage 
and say so openly, without equivocation! We shall then 
know whom we are dealing with, and you will rid your- 
selves of the programme formalities which you so heartily 
detest! As it is, you talk so timidly and furtively about 
the programme being of little importance that many peo- 
ple, except, of course, the Bolsheviks, still think that you 
recognise the Russian Social-Democratic programme that 
was adopted at the Second Party Congress. What's the 
use of this hypocritical conduct? 

This brings us right down to the roots of our dis- 
agreements. You do not believe in our programme and you 
challenge its correctness; we, however, always take it 
is our starting point and co-ordinate all our activities 
with it! 

We believe that "rich and influential persons" will 
not be able to bribe and fool all the people if there 
is freedom for election propaganda; for we shall coun- 
ter their influence and their gold with the words of 
Social-Democratic truth (and we, unlike you, do not 
doubt this truth in the least) and thereby we shall reduce 
the effect of the fraudulent tricks of the bourgeoisie. 
You, however, do not believe this, and are, therefore, try- 
ing to pull the revolution in the direction of reformism. 

"In 1848," continue the "critics," "the provisional 
government in France (again France!) in which there 
were also workers, convoked a Constituent Assembly 
to which not a single representative of the Paris prole- 
tariat was elected." This is another example of utter 
failure to understand Social-Democratic theory and of 



156 J. V. STALIN 



the stereotyped conception of history! What is the use 
of flinging phrases about? Although there were workers 
in the provisional government in France, nothing came 
of it; therefore, Social-Democracy in Russia must refrain 
from entering a provisional government because here, 
too, nothing will come of it, argue the "critics." But is 
it a matter of workers entering the provisional govern- 
ment? Do we say that any kind of workers, no matter 
of what trend, should go into the provisional revolution- 
ary government? No. So far we have not become your 
followers and do not supply every worker with a Social- 
Democratic certificate. It never entered our heads to 
call the workers who were in the French provisional 
government members of the Social-Democratic Party! 
What is the use of this misplaced analogy? What compar- 
ison can there be between the political consciousness 
of the French proletariat in 1848 and the political con- 
sciousness of the Russian proletariat at the present time? 
Did the French proletariat of that time come out even 
once in a political demonstration against the existing 
system? Did it ever celebrate the First of May under the 
slogan of fighting against the bourgeois system? Was 
it organised in a Social-Democratic Labour Party? Did it 
have the programme of Social-Democracy? We know that 
it did not. The French proletariat had not even an inkling 
of all this. The question is, therefore, could the French 
proletariat at that time reap the fruits of the revolution 
to the same extent that the Russian proletariat can, 
a proletariat that has long been organised in a Social- 
Democratic Party, has a very definite Social-Democratic 
programme, and is consciously laying the road towards 
its goal? Anyone who is in the least capable of under- 



PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY GOVERNMENT AND S.-D 157 

Standing realities will answer this question in the nega- 
tive. Only those who are capable of learning historical 
facts by rote, but are incapable of explaining their causes 
in conformity with place and time can identify these 
two different magnitudes. 

"We need," the "critics" preach to us again and 
again, "violence on the part of the people, uninterrupted 
revolution, and we must not be satisfied with elections 
and then disperse to our homes." Again slander! Who 
told you, esteemed gentlemen, that we shall be satisfied 
with elections and then disperse to our homes? Mention 
his name! 

Our "critics" are also upset by our demand that the 
provisional revolutionary government should carry out 
our minimum programme, and they exclaim: "This reveals 
complete ignorance of the subject; the point is that the 
political and economic demands in our programme can be 
achieved only by means of legislation, but a provisional 
government is not a legislative body." Reading this 
prosecutor's speech against "infringement of the law" 
one begins to wonder whether this article was not con- 
tributed to the Social-Democrat by some liberal bourgeois 
who stands in awe before the law.* How else can one 
explain the bourgeois sophistry it expresses to the effect 



* This idea seems to be all the more justified for the reason 
that of all the bourgeoisie of Tiflis, the Mensheviks, in No. 5 
of Social-Democrat, proclaimed only about a dozen merchants 
as traitors to the "common cause." Evidently, all the rest are 
their supporters and have a "common cause" with the Menshe- 
viks. It would not be surprising if one of these supporters of the 
"common cause" sent to the organ of his colleagues a "critical" 
article against the uncompromising "majority." 



158 J. V. STALIN 



that a provisional revolutionary government has no 
right to abolish old and introduce new laws? Does not 
this argument smack of vulgar liberalism? And is it 
not strange to hear it coming from the mouth of a revo- 
lutionary? It reminds us of the man who was condemned 
to be beheaded and who begged that care should be taken 
not to touch the pimple on his neck. However, everything 
can be forgiven the "critics" who cannot distinguish 
between a provisional revolutionary government and 
an ordinary cabinet (and besides, they are not to blame, 
their teachers, the Martynovs and Akimovs, reduced 
them to this state). What is a cabinet? The result of the 
existence of a permanent government. What is a pro- 
visional revolutionary government? The result of the 
destruction of a permanent government. The former puts 
existing laws into operation with the aid of a standing 
army. The latter abolishes the existing laws and in place 
of them gives legal sanction to the will of the revolution 
with the assistance of the insurgent people. What is 
there in common between the two? 

Let us assume that the revolution has triumphed and 
that the victorious people have set up a provisional 
revolutionary government. The question arises: What is 
this government to do if it has no right to abolish and 
introduce laws? Wait for the Constituent Assembly? 
But the convocation of this Assembly also demands the 
introduction of new laws such as: universal, direct, 
etc., suffrage, freedom of speech, of the press, of 
assembly, and so forth. And all this is contained in our 
minimum programme. If the provisional revolutionary 
government is unable to put it into practice, what will 
it be guided by in convening the Constituent Assembly? 



PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY GOVERNMENT AND S.-D 159 

Not by a programme drawn up by Bulygin'*^ and sanc- 
tioned by Nicholas II, surely? 

Let us assume also that, after suffering heavy losses 
owing to lack of arms, the victorious people calls upon 
the provisional revolutionary government to abolish 
the standing army and to arm the people in order to 
combat counter-revolution. At that moment the Menshe- 
viks come out and say: it is not the function of this 
department (the provisional revolutionary government) 
but of another — the Constituent Assembly — to abolish 
the standing army and to arm the people. Appeal to that 
other department. Don't demand action that infringes 
the law, etc. Fine counsellors, indeed! 

Let us now see on what grounds the Mensheviks de- 
prive the provisional revolutionary government of "legal 
capacity." Firstly, on the ground that it is not a legisla- 
tive body, and secondly, that if it passes laws, the Constit- 
uent Assembly will have nothing to do. Such is the dis- 
graceful result of the arguments of these political infants! 
It appears that they do not even know that, pending the 
setting up of a permanent government, the triumphant 
revolution, and the provisional revolutionary govern- 
ment which expresses its will, are the masters of the situa- 
tion and, consequently, can abolish old and introduce new 
laws! If this were not the case, if the provisional revo- 
lutionary government lacked these powers, there would 
be no reason for its existence, and the insurgent people 
would not set up such a body. Strange that the Menshe- 
viks have forgotten the ABC of revolution. 

The Mensheviks ask: What will the Constituent 
Assembly do if our minimum programme is carried out 
by the provisional revolutionary government? Are you 



160 J. V. STALIN 



afraid that it will suffer from unemployment, esteemed 
gentlemen? Don't be afraid. It will have plenty of work 
to do. It will sanction the changes brought about by the 
provisional revolutionary government with the assist- 
ance of the insurgent people and will draft a constitution 
for the country, and our minimum programme will be 
only a part of it. That is what we shall demand from the 
Constituent Assembly! 

"They (the Bolsheviks) cannot conceive of a split 
between the petty bourgeoisie and the workers, a split 
that will also affect the elections, and, consequently, 
the provisional government will want to oppress the 
working-class voters for the benefit of its own class," 
write the "critics." Who can understand this wisdom? 
What is the meaning of: "the provisional government 
will want to oppress the working-class voters for the 
benefit of its own class"!!? What provisional government 
are they talking about? What windmills are these Don 
Quixotes tilting at? Has anybody said that if the petty 
bourgeoisie is in sole control of the provisional revolu- 
tionary government it will protect the interests of the 
workers? Why ascribe one's own nonsense to others? 
We say that under certain circumstances it is permissible 
for our Social-Democratic delegates to enter a provi- 
sional revolutionary government together with the repre- 
sentatives of the democracy. That being the case, if we 
are discussing a provisional revolutionary government 
which includes Social-Democrats, how is it possible to 
call it petty-bourgeois in composition? We base our argu- 
ments in favour of entering a provisional revolutionary 
government on the fact that, in the main, the carrying 
out of our minimum programme does not run counter to 



PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY GOVERNMENT AND S.-D 161 

the interests of the democracy — the peasantry and the 
urban petty bourgeoisie (whom you Mensheviks invite 
into your party) — and, therefore, we deem it possible 
to carry it out in conjunction with the democracy. If, 
however, the democracy hinders the carrying out of 
some of its points, our delegates, backed by their vot- 
ers, the proletariat, in the street, will try to carry this 
programme out by force, if that force is available (if it is 
not, we shall not enter the provisional government, in 
fact we shall not be elected). As you see, Social-Democ- 
racy must enter the provisional revolutionary govern- 
ment precisely in order to champion Social-Democratic 
views in it, i.e., to prevent the other classes from en- 
croaching upon the interests of the proletariat. 

The representatives of the Russian Social-Democratic 
Labour Party in the provisional revolutionary govern- 
ment will proclaim war not upon the proletariat, as 
the Mensheviks imagine in their folly, but, jointly 
with the proletariat, upon the enemies of the proletariat. 
But what do you, Mensheviks, care about all this? What 
do you care about the revolution and its provisional 
government? Your place is in the "St[ate Duma"]. . . .* 

Part I of this article was 
published in Proletarians Brdzola 
(The Proletarian Struggle), No. 11, 
August 15, 1905 
Part II is published for the first time 

Unsigned 

Translated from the Georgian 



Here the manuscript breaks off. — Ed. 



A REPLY TO SOCIAL-DEMOCRAT 



46 



First of all I must apologise to the reader for being 
late with this reply. It could not be helped; circumstances 
obliged me to work in another field, and I was compelled 
to put off my answer for a time; you yourselves know that 
we cannot dispose of ourselves as we please. 

I must also say the following: many people think 
that the author of the pamphlet Briefly About the Disagree- 
ments in the Party was the Union Committee and not one 
individual. I must state that I am the author of that 
pamphlet. The Union Committee acted only as editor. 

And now to the point. 

My opponent accuses me of being "unable to see the 
subject of the controversy," of "obscuring the issue,"* 
and he says that "the controversy centres around organ- 
isational and not programmatic questions" (p. 2). 

Only a little observation is needed to reveal that the 
author's assertion is false. The fact is that my pamphlet 
was an answer to i\\Q first number of the Social-Democrat — 
the pamphlet had already been sent to the press when 
the second number of the Social-Democrat appeared. 
What does the author say in the first number? Only 
that the "majority" has taken the stand of idealism, 



See "A Reply to the Union Committee," p. 4. 



A REPLY TO SOCIAL-DEMOCRAT 163 

and that this stand "fundamentally contradicts" Marxism. 
Here there is not even a hint of organisational questions. 
What was I to say in reply? Only what I did say, namely: 
that the stand of the "majority" is that of genuine 
Marxism, and if the "minority" has failed to understand 
this, it shows that it has itself retreated from genuine 
Marxism. That is what anybody who understands any- 
thing about polemics would have answered. But the author 
persists in asking: Why don't you deal with organisational 
questions? I do not deal with those questions, my dear 
philosopher, because you yourself did not then say a 
word about them. One cannot answer questions that have 
not yet been raised. Clearly, "obscuring the issue," 
"hushing up the subject of the controversy," and so 
forth, are the author's inventions. On the other hand, 
I have grounds for suspecting that the author himself 
is hushing up certain questions. He says that "the contro- 
versy centres around organisational questions," but there 
are also disagreements between us on tactical questions, 
which are far more important than disagreements on 
organisational questions. Our "critic," however, does 
not say a word about these disagreements in his pamphlet. 
Now this is exactly what is called "obscuring the issue." 

What do I say in my pamphlet? 

Modern social life is built on capitalist lines. There 
exist two large classes, the bourgeoisie and the prole- 
tariat, and between them a life-and-death struggle is 
going on. The conditions of life of the bourgeoisie compel 
it to strengthen the capitalist system. But the conditions 
of life of the proletariat compel it to undermine the 
capitalist system, to destroy it. Corresponding to these 
two classes, two kinds of consciousness are worked out: 



164 J. V. STALIN 



the bourgeois and the socialist. Socialist consciousness 
corresponds to the position of the proletariat. Hence, the 
proletariat accepts this consciousness, assimilates it, 
and fights the capitalist system with redoubled vigour. 
Needless to say, if there were no capitalism and no class 
struggle, there would be no socialist consciousness. But 
the question now is: who works out, who is able to work 
out this socialist consciousness (i.e., scientific social- 
ism)? Kautsky says, and I repeat his idea, that the masses 
of proletarians, as long as they remain proletarians, 
have neither the time nor the opportunity to work out 
socialist consciousness. "Modern socialist consciousness 
can arise only on the basis of profound scientific knowl- 
edge,"* says Kautsky. The vehicles of science are the 
intellectuals, including, for example, Marx, Engels and 
others, who have both the time and opportunity to put 
themselves in the van of science and work out socialist 
consciousness. Clearly, socialist consciousness is worked 
out by a few Social-Democratic intellectuals who possess 
the time and opportunity to do so. 

But what importance can socialist consciousness have 
in itself if it is not disseminated among the proletariat? 
It can remain only an empty phrase! Things will take an 
altogether different turn when that consciousness is dis- 
seminated among the proletariat: the proletariat will 
become conscious of its position and will more rapidly 
move towards the socialist way of life. It is here that 
Social-Democracy (and not only Social-Democratic intel- 
lectuals) comes in and introduces socialist consciousness 



* See K. Kautsky's article quoted in What Is To Be Done? , 
p. 27. 



A REPLY TO SOCIAL-DEMOCRAT 165 

into the working-class movement. This is what Kautsky 
has in mind when he says "socialist consciousness is 
something introduced into the proletarian class struggle 
from without."* 

Thus, socialist consciousness is worked out by a few 
Social-Democratic intellectuals. But this consciousness 
is introduced into the working-class movement by the 
entire Social-Democracy, which lends the spontaneous 
proletarian struggle a conscious character. 

That is what I discuss in my pamphlet. 

Such is the stand taken by Marxism and, with it, 
by the "majority." 

What does my opponent advance in opposition to 
this? 

Properly speaking, nothing of importance. He devotes 
himself more to hurling abuse than to elucidating the 
question. Evidently, he is very angry! He does not dare 
to raise questions openly, he gives no straight answer 
to them, but cravenly evades the issue, hypocriti- 
cally obscures clearly formulated questions, and at the 
same time assures everybody: I have explained all the 
questions at one stroke. Thus, for example, the author 
does not even raise the question of the elaboration of social- 
ist consciousness, and does not dare to say openly whose 
side he takes on this question: Kautsky's or the "Econ- 
omists'." True, in the first number of the Social-Demo- 
crat our "critic" made rather bold statements; at that 
time he openly spoke in the language of the "Econo- 
mists." But what can one do? Then he was in one mood, 
now he is in a "different mood," and instead of criticising. 



Ibid. 



166 J. V. STALIN 



he evades this issue, perhaps because he realises that 
he is wrong, but he does not dare openly to admit his 
mistake. In general, our author has found himself between 
two fires. He is at a loss as to which side to take. If he 
takes the side of the "Economists" he must break with 
Kautsky and Marxism, which is not to his advantage; 
if, however, he breaks with "Economism" and takes 
Kautsky's side, he must subscribe to what the "major- 
ity" says -- but he lacks the courage to do this. And so 
he remains between two fires. What could our "critic" do? 
He decided that the best thing is to say nothing, and, 
indeed, he cravenly evades the issue that was raised above. 

What does the author say about introducing conscious- 
ness! 

Here, too, he betrays the same vacillation and coward- 
ice. He shuffles the question and declares with great 
aplomb: Kautsky does not say that "intellectuals intro- 
duce socialism into the working class from without" 
(p. 7). 

Excellent, but neither do we Bolsheviks say that, 
Mr. "Critic." Why did you have to tilt at windmills? 
How is it you cannot understand that in our opinion, 
the opinion of the Bolsheviks, socialist consciousness 
is introduced into the working-class movement by Social- 
Democracy,* and not only by Social-Democratic intel- 
lectuals? Why do you think that the Social-Democratic 
Party consists exclusively of intellectuals? Do you not 
know that there are many more advanced workers than 
intellectuals in the ranks of Social-Democracy? Cannot 



* See Briefly About the Disagreements in the Party, p. 18. 
(See present volume, p. 104. — Ed.) 



A REPLY TO SOCIAL-DEMOCRAT 167 

Social-Democratic workers introduce socialist conscious- 
ness into the working-class movement? 

Evidently, the author himself realises that his "proof 
is unconvincing and so he passes on to other "proof." 

Our "critic" continues as follows: "Kautsky writes: 
'Together with the proletariat there arises of natural 
necessity a socialist tendency among the proletarians 
themselves as well as among those who adopt the prole 
tarian standpoint; this explains the rise of socialist 
strivings.' Hence, it is obvious" — comments our "critic" 
— "that socialism is not introduced among the proletariat 
from without, but, on the contrary, emanates from the 
proletariat and enters the heads of those who adopt the 
views of the proletariat" ("A Reply to the Union Com- 
mittee," p. 8). 

Thus writes our "critic," and he imagines that he has 
explained the matter! What do Kautsky's words mean? 
Only that socialist strivings automatically arise among 
the proletariat. And this is true, of course. But we are 
not discussing socialist strivings, but socialist conscious- 
ness] What is there in common between the two? Are 
strivings and consciousness the same thing? Cannot the 
author distinguish between "socialist tendencies" and 
"socialist consciousness"? And is it not a sign of paucity 
of ideas when, from what Kautsky says, he deduces that 
"socialism is not introduced from without"? What is 
there in common between the "rise of socialist tenden- 
cies" and the introducing of socialist consciousness? 
Did not this same Kautsky say that "socialist con- 
sciousness is something introduced into the prole- 
tarian class struggle from without" (see What Is To Be 
Done?, p. 27)? 



168 J. V. STALIN 



Evidently, the author realises that he is in a false 
position and in conclusion he is obliged to add: "It does 
indeed follow from the quotation from Kautsky that 
socialist consciousness is introduced into the class struggle 
from without" (see "A Reply to the Union Committee," 
p. 7). Nevertheless, he does not dare openly and boldly 
to admit this scientific truth. Here, too, our Menshevik 
betrays the same vacillation and cowardice in the face 
of logic as he did before. 

Such is the ambiguous "reply" Mr. "Critic" gives to 
the two major questions. 

What can be said about the other, minor questions 
that automatically emerge from these big questions? 
It will be better if the reader himself compares my pam- 
phlet with our author's pamphlet. But one other question 
must be dealt with. If we are to believe the author, our 
opinion is that "the split took place because the con- 
gress . . . did not elect Axelrod, Zasulich and Starover 
as editors . . ." ("A Reply," p. 13) and, consequently, 
that we "deny the split, conceal how deeply it affects 
principle, and present the entire opposition as if it were 
a case of three 'rebellious' editors" {ibid., p. 16). 

Here the author is again confusing the issue. As a 
matter of fact two questions are raised here: the cause 
of the split, and the form in which the disagreements 
manifested themselves. 

To the first question I give the following straight 
answer: "It is now clear on what grounds the disagreements 
in the Party arose. As is evident, two trends have 
appeared in our Party: the trend oi proletarian firmness, 
and the trend of intellectual wavering. And this intellec- 
tual wavering is expressed by the present 'minority'" 



A REPLY TO SOCIAL-DEMOCRAT 169 

(see Briefly, p. 46).* As you see, here I attribute the 
disagreements to the existence of an intellectual and a 
proletarian trend in our Party and not to the conduct 
of Martov-Axelrod. The conduct of Martov and the others 
is merely an expression of intellectual wavering. But 
evidently, our Menshevik failed to understand this pas- 
sage in my pamphlet. 

As regards the second question, I did, indeed, say, 
and always shall say, that the leaders of the "minority" 
shed tears over "front seats" and lent the struggle within 
the Party precisely such a form. Our author refuses to 
admit this. It is, nevertheless, a fact that the leaders 
of the "minority" proclaimed a boycott of the Party, 
openly demanded seats on the Central Committee, on 
the Central Organ and on the Party Council and, in addi- 
tion, declared: "We present these terms as the only ones 
that will enable the Party to avoid a conflict which will 
threaten its very existence" (see Commentary, p. 26). What 
does this mean if not that the leaders of the "minor- 
ity" inscribed on their banner, not an ideological strug- 
gle, but "a struggle for seats"? It is common knowledge 
that nobody prevented them from conducting a struggle 
around ideas and principles. Did not the Bolsheviks 
say to them: Establish your own organ and defend your 
views, the Party can provide you with such an organ (see 
Commentary)! Why did they not agree to this if they were 
really interested in principles and not in "front seats"? 

We call all this the political spinelessness of the 
Menshevik leaders. Do not be offended, gentlemen, when 
we call a spade a spade. 



See present volume, p. 132. — Ed. 



170 J. V. STALIN 



Formerly, the leaders of the "minority" did not dis- 
agree with Marxism and Lenin on the point that social- 
ist consciousness is introduced into the working-class 
movement from without (see the programmatic article in 
Iskra, No. 1). But later they began to waver and launched 
a struggle against Lenin, burning what they had wor- 
shipped the day before. I called that swinging from one 
side to another. Do not be offended at this either, 
Messieurs Mensheviks. 

Yesterday you worshipped the centres and hurled 
thunderbolts at us because, as you said, we expressed 
lack of confidence in the Central Committee. But today 
you are undermining not only the centres, but centralism 
(see "The First All-Russian Conference"). I call this lack 
of principle, and I hope you will not be angry with me 
for this either. Messieurs Mensheviks. 

If we combine such features as political spineless- 
ness, fighting for seats, vacillation, lack of principle 
and others of the same kind, we shall get a certain general 
feature known as intellectual wavering, and it is prima- 
rily intellectuals who suffer from this. Clearly, intel- 
lectual wavering is the ground (the basis) on which 
"fighting for seats," "lack of principle," and so forth, 
arise. The vacillation of the intellectuals, however, 
springs from their social position. That is how we explain 
the Party split. Do you understand at last, dear author, 
what difference there is between the cause of the split 
and the forms it assumes? I have my doubts. 

Such is the absurd and ambiguous stand taken by the 
Social-Democrat and its queer "critic." On the other 
hand, this "critic" displays great daring in another 
field. In his pamphlet of eight pages, he manages to 



A REPLY TO SOCIAL-DEMOCRAT 111 

tell eight lies about the Bolsheviks, and such lies that 
they make you laugh. You do not believe it? Here 
are the facts. 

First lie. In the author's opinion, "Lenin wants to 
restrict the Party, to convert it into a narrow organi- 
sation of professionals" (p. 2). But Lenin says: "It 
should not be thought that Party organisations must 
consist solely of professional revolutionaries. We need 
the most diversified organisations of every type, rank 
and shade, from extremely narrow and secret organisa- 
tions to very broad and free ones" {Minutes, p. 240). 

Second lie. According to the author, Lenin wants to 
"bring into the Party only committee members" (p. 2). 
But Lenin says: "All groups, circles, sub-committees, etc., 
must enjoy the status of committee institutions, or of 
branches of committees. Some of them will openly ex- 
press a wish to join the Russian Social-Democratic 
Labour Party and, provided that this is endorsed by the 
committee, will join it" (see "A Letter to a Comrade," 
p. 17). *4** 

Third lie. In the author's opinion, "Lenin is demand- 
ing the establishment of the domination of intellectuals 
in the Party" (p. 5). But Lenin says: "The committees 
should contain ... as far as possible, all the principal 
leaders of the working-class movement from among 
the workers themselves" (see "A Letter to a Comrade," 
pp. 7-8), i.e., the voices of the advanced workers must 
predominate not only in all other organisations, but also 
in the committees. 



* As you see, in Lenin's opinion, organisations may be ac- 
cepted into the Party not only by the Central Committee, but also 
by local committees. 



172 J. V. STALIN 



Fourth lie. The author says that the passage quoted 
on page 12 of my pamphlet: "the working class sponta- 
neously gravitates towards socialism," etc. — is "entirely 
a fabrication" (p. 6). As a matter of fact, I simply took 
and translated this passage from What Is To Be Done? 
This is what we read in that book, on page 29: "The 
working class spontaneously gravitates towards social- 
ism, but the more widespread (and continuously revived 
in the most diverse forms) bourgeois ideology neverthe- 
less spontaneously imposes itself upon the working class 
still more." This is the passage that is translated on 
page 12 of my pamphlet. This is what our "critic" called 
a fabrication! I do not know whether to ascribe this to 
the author's absent-mindedness or chicanery. 

Fifth lie. In the author's opinion, "Lenin does not 
say anywhere that the workers strive towards socialism 
of 'natural necessity'" (p. 7). But Lenin says that the 
"working class spontaneously gravitates towards so- 
cialism" {What Is To Be Done?, p. 29). 

Sixth lie. The author ascribes to me the idea that "so- 
cialism is introduced into the working class from with- 
out by the intelligentsia" (p. 7), whereas I say that Social- 
Democracy (and not only Social-Democratic intellectuals) 
introduces socialist consciousness into the movement 
(p. 18). 

Seventh lie. In the author's opinion, Lenin says that 
socialist ideology arose "quite independently of the 
working-class movement" (p. 9). But such an idea cer- 
tainly never entered Lenin's head. He says that socialist 
ideology arose "quite independently of the spontaneous 
growth of the working-class movement" {What Is To 
Be Done?, ^. 21). 



A REPLY TO SOCIAL-DEMOCRAT 173 

Eighth lie. The author says that my statement: 
"Plekhanov is quitting the 'minority,' is tittle-tattle." 
As a matter of fact, what I said has been confirmed. 
Plekhanov has already quit the "minority." . . .* 

I shall not deal with the petty lies with which the 
author has so plentifully spiced his pamphlet. 

It must be admitted, however, that the author did 
say one thing that was true. He tells us that "when any 
organisation begins to engage in tittle-tattle — its days 
are numbered" (p. 15). This is the downright truth, of 
course. The only question is: Who is engaging in tittle- 
tattle — the Social-Democrat and its queer knight, or 
the Union Committee? We leave that to the reader to 
decide. 

One more question and we have finished. The author 
says with an air of great importance: "The Union Com- 
mittee reproaches us for repeating Plekhanov's ideas. 
We regard it as a virtue to repeat the ideas of Plekhanov, 
Kautsky and other equally well-known Marxists"(p. 15). 
So you regard it as a virtue to repeat the ideas of Plekha- 
nov and Kautsky? Splendid, gentlemen! Well, then, 
listen: 

Kautsky says that "socialist consciousness is some- 
thing introduced into the proletarian class struggle from 
without and not something that arose out of it spontaneously'" 
(see passage quoted from Kautsky in What Is To Be 
Done?, p. 27). The same Kautsky says that "the task of 
Social-Democracy is to imbue the proletariat with the 
consciousness of its position and the consciousness of 

* And yet the author has the audacity to accuse us, in No. 5 
of the Social-Democrat, of having distorted the facts concerning the 
Third Congress! 



174 J. V. STALIN 



its task" {ibid.). We hope that you, Mr. Menshevik, will 
repeat these words of Kautsky's and dispel our doubts. 
Let us pass to Plekhanov. Plekhanov says: ". . . Nor 
do I understand why it is thought that Lenin's draft,* 
if adopted, would close the doors of our Party to numer- 
ous workers. Workers who wish to join the Party will 
not be afraid to join an organisation. They are not afraid 
of discipline. But many intellectuals, thoroughly imbued 
with bourgeois individualism, will be afraid to join. 
Now that is exactly the good side about it. These bour- 
geois individualists are, usually, also representatives 
of opportunism of every sort. We must keep them at a 
distance. Lenin's draft may serve as a barrier against 
their invasion of the Party, and for that reason alone 
all opponents of opportunism should vote for it" (see 
Minutes, p. 246). 

We hope that you, Mr. "Critic," will throw off your 
mask and with proletarian straightforwardness repeat 
these words of Plekhanov's. 

If you fail to do this, it will show that your state- 
ments in the press are thoughtless and irresponsible. 

Proletarians Brdzola 

(The Proletarian Struggle), No. 11, 

August 15, 1905 

Unsigned 

Translated from the Georgian 



* Plekhanov is discussing Lenin's and Martov's formulations 
of § 1 of the Rules of the Party. 



REACTION IS GROWING 



Dark clouds are gathering over us. The decrepit 
autocracy is raising its head and arming itself with "fire 
and sword." Reaction is on the march! Let no one talk 
to us about the tsar's "reforms," the object of which is 
to strengthen the despicable autocracy: the "reforms" 
are a screen for the bullets and whips to which the brutal 
tsarist government is so generously treating us. 

There was a time when the government refrained 
from shedding blood within the country. At that time 
it was waging war against the "external enemy," and 
it needed "internal tranquillity." That is why it showed 
a certain amount of "leniency" towards the "internal 
enemy" and turned a "blind eye" on the movement 
that was flaring up 

Now times are different. Frightened by the spectre 
of revolution, the tsarist government hastened to con- 
clude peace with the "external enemy," with Japan, in 
order to muster its forces and "thoroughly" settle ac- 
counts with the "internal enemy." And so reaction set 
in. The government had already revealed its "plans" 
before that, in Moskovskiye Vedomosti^'^ It . . . "was 
obliged to wage two parallel wars . . ." wrote that reac- 
tionary newspaper — "an external war and an internal 



176 J. V. STALIN 



war. If it waged neither of them with sufficient energy . . . 
it may be explained partly by the fact that one war 
hindered the other. ... If the war in the Far East now 
terminates . . ." the government ". . . will, at last, have 
its hands free victoriously to terminate the internal 
war too . . . without any negotiations to crush" . . . 
"the internal enemies.". . . "With the termination of 
the war, Russia (read: the government) will concentrate 
all her attention on her internal life and, mainly, on 
quelling sedition" {sqq Moskovskiye Vedomosti, August 18). 

Such were the "plans" of the tsarist government in 
concluding peace with Japan. 

Then, when peace was concluded, it announced these 
"plans" once again through the mouth of its minister: 
"We shall drown the extremist parties in Russia in 
blood," said the minister. Through its viceroys and 
governor-generals it is already putting the above-men- 
tioned "plans" into execution: it is not for nothing that 
it has transformed Russia into a military camp, it is 
not for nothing that it has inundated the centres of the 
movement with Cossacks and troops and has turned 
machine guns against the proletariat one would think 
that the government is setting out to conquer boundless 
Russia a second time! 

As you see, the government is proclaiming war on the 
revolution and is directing its first blows against its ad- 
vanced detachment — the proletariat. That is how its 
threats against the "extremist parties" are to be inter- 
preted. It will not, of course, "neglect" the peasantry and 
will generously treat it to whips and bullets if it proves 
to be "unwise enough" to demand a human existence; 
but meanwhile the government is trying to deceive it: 



REACTION IS GROWING 177 



it is promising it land and inviting it into the Duma, 
painting pictures of "all sorts of liberties" in the future. 

As regards the "gentry," the government will, of 
course, treat it "more delicately," and will try to enter 
into an alliance with it: that is exactly what the State 
Duma exists for. Needless to say. Messieurs the liberal 
bourgeoisie will not reject an "agreement." As far back 
as August 5 they stated through the mouth of their leader 
that they were enthusiastic over the tsar's reforms: 
". . . All efforts must be exerted to prevent Russia . . . 
from following the revolutionary path pursued by France" 
(see Russkiye VedomostP^ of August 5, article by Vino- 
gradov). Needless to say, the sly liberals would rather 
betray the revolution than Nicholas II. This was suffi- 
ciently proved by their last congress. . . . 

In short, the tsarist government is exerting all efforts 
to crush the people's revolution. 

Bullets for the proletariat, false promises for the 
peasantry and "rights" for the big bourgeoisie — such are 
the weapons with which the reaction is arming. 

Either the defeat of the revolution or death — such is 
the autocracy's slogan today. 

On the other hand, the forces of the revolution are 
on the alert too, and are continuing their great work. 
The crisis which has been intensified by the war together 
with the political strikes which are breaking out with 
growing frequency, have stirred up the proletariat of the 
whole of Russia and have brought it face to face with the 
tsarist autocracy. Martial law, far from intimidating 
the proletariat, has, on the contrary, merely poured 
oil on the flames, and has still further worsened the 
situation. No one who hears the countless cries of 



178 J. V. STALIN 



proletarians: "Down with the tsarist government, down 
with the tsarist Duma!", no one who has felt the pulse 
of the working class, can doubt that the revolutionary 
spirit of the proletariat, the leader of the revolution, 
will rise higher and higher. As regards the peasantry — 
the war mobilisation which wrecked their homes by 
depriving their families of their best bread-winners, 
roused them against the present regime. If we also bear 
in mind that to this has been added the famine which has 
afflicted twenty-six gubernias, it will not be difficult 
to guess what path the long-suffering peasantry must 
take. And lastly, the troops, too, are beginning to mur- 
mur and this murmur is daily becoming more menacing 
for the autocracy. The Cossacks — the prop of the autoc- 
racy — are beginning to evoke the hatred of the troops: 
recently the troops in Novaya Alexandria wiped out 
three hundred Cossacks.* The number of facts like these 
is steadily growing. . . . 

In short, life is preparing another revolutionary 
wave, which is gradually rising and sweeping against 
the reaction. The recent events in Moscow and St. Peters- 
burg are harbingers of this wave. 

What should be our attitude towards all these events? 
What should we Social-Democrats do? 

To listen to the Menshevik Martov, we ought to elect 
this very day a Constituent Assembly to uproot the foun- 
dations of the tsarist autocracy forever. In his opinion, 
illegal elections ought to be held simultaneously with the 
legal elections to the Duma. Electoral committees should 
be set up to call upon "the people to elect their repre- 



Sqq Proletary, ^'^ No. 17. 



REACTION IS GROWING 179 



sentatives by means of universal suffrage. At a certain 
moment these representatives should gather in a certain 
town and proclaim themselves a Constituent As- 
sembly. . . ." This is how "the liquidation of the autoc- 
racy should take place."* In other words, we can con- 
duct a general election all over Russia in spite of the 
fact that the autocracy still lives! "Illegal" representa- 
tives of the people can proclaim themselves a Constituent 
Assembly and establish a democratic republic in spite 
of the fact that the autocracy is running riot! It appears 
that neither arms, nor an uprising, nor a provisional 
government is needed — the democratic republic will 
come of its own accord; all that is needed is that the 
"illegal" representatives should call themselves a Con- 
stituent Assembly! Good Martov has forgotten only 
one thing, that one fine day his fairyland "Constituent 
Assembly" will find itself in the Fortress of Peter and 
Paul! Martov in Geneva fails to understand that the prac- 
tical workers in Russia have no time to play at bourgeois 
spillikins. 

No, we want to do something else. 

Dark reaction is mustering sinister forces and is 
doing its utmost to unite them — our task is to unite the 
Social-Democratic forces and to weld them more closely. 

Dark reaction is convening the Duma; it wants to 
gain new allies and to enlarge the army of the counter- 
revolution — our task is to proclaim an active boycott of 
the Duma, to expose its counter-revolutionary face to 
the whole world and to multiply the ranks of the sup- 
porters of the revolution. 



See Proletary, No. 15 where Martov's "plan" is published. 



180 J. V. STALIN 



Dark reaction has launched a deadly attack against 
the revolution; it wants to cause confusion in our ranks 
and to dig the grave of the people's revolution — our 
task is to close our ranks, to launch a country-wide 
simultaneous attack against the tsarist autocracy and 
wipe out the memory of it forever. 

Not Martov's house of cards, but a general uprising — 
that is what we need. 

The salvation of the people lies in the victorious 
uprising of the people themselves. 

Either the victory of the revolution or death — such 
should be our revolutionary slogan today. 

Proletariatis Brdzola 

{The Proletarian Struggle), No. 12, 

October 15, 1905 



Unsigned 

Translated from the Georgian 



THE BOURGEOISIE IS LAYEVG A TRAP 



In the middle of September a congress of "persons 
active in rural and urban affairs" was held. At this con- 
gress a new "party"" was formed, headed by a Central 
Committee and with local bodies in different towns. The 
congress adopted a "programme," defined its "tactics," 
and drew up a special appeal which this newly-hatched 
"party" is to issue to the people. In short, the "persons 
active in rural and urban affairs" formed their own 
"party." 

Who are these "persons"? What are they called? 

The bourgeois liberals. 

Who are the bourgeois liberals? 

The class-conscious representatives of the wealthy 
bourgeoisie. 

The wealthy bourgeoisie are our uncompromising 
enemies, their wealth is based upon our poverty, their 
joy is based upon our sorrow. Clearly, their class- 
conscious representatives will be our sworn enemies 
who will consciously try to smash us. 

Thus, a "party" of the enemies of the people has been 
formed, and it intends to issue an appeal to the people. 

What do these gentlemen want? What do they advo- 
cate in their appeal? 



182 J. V. STALIN 



They are not Socialists, they detest the socialist 
movement. That means that they are out to strengthen 
the bourgeois system and are waging a life-and-death 
struggle against the proletariat. That is why they enjoy 
great sympathy in bourgeois circles. 

Nor are they Democrats, they detest the democratic 
republic. That means that they are out to strengthen the 
tsar's throne and are also fighting zealously against the 
long-suffering peasantry. That is why Nicholas II "gra- 
ciously" permitted them to hold meetings and to convene 
a "party" congress. 

All they want is slightly to curtail the powers of 
the tsar, and then only on the condition that these powers 
are transferred to the bourgeoisie. As regards tsarism 
itself, it must, in their opinion, certainly remain as a 
reliable bulwark of the wealthy bourgeoisie, which will 
use it against the proletariat. That is why they say in 
their "draft constitution" that "the throne of the Roma- 
novs must remain inviolable," i.e., they want a curtailed 
constitution with a limited monarchy. 

Messieurs the bourgeois liberals "have no objection" 
to the people being granted the franchise, provided, 
however, that the chamber of the people's representatives 
is dominated by a chamber representing the rich, which 
will certainly exert all efforts to modify and annul the 
decisions of the chamber of the people's representatives. 
That is why they say in their programme: "We need two 
chambers." 

Messieurs the bourgeois liberals will be "very glad" if 
freedom of speech, of the press and of association is grant- 
ed, provided, however, that freedom to strike is restrict- 
ed. That is why they talk such a lot about the "rights of 



THE BOURGEOISIE IS LAYING A TRAP 183 

man and the citizen" but say nothing intelligible about 
freedom to strike, except for hypocritical prattle about 
nebulous "economic reforms." 

Nor do these queer gentlemen withhold their charity 
from the peasantry — they "have no objection" to the 
land of the landlords being transferred to the peasants, 
provided, however, the peasants buy this land from the 
landlords and do not "receive it gratis." You see how 
benevolent these sorry "personages" are! 

If they live to see all these wishes carried out, the 
result will be that the powers of the tsar will pass into 
the hands of the bourgeoisie, and the tsarist autocracy 
will gradually be transformed into the autocracy of the 
bourgeoisie. That is what the "persons active in rural 
and urban affairs" are driving at. That is why they 
are haunted by the people's revolution even in their 
sleep and talk so much about "pacifying Russia." 

It is not surprising, after this, that these luckless 
"personages" placed such great hopes on the so-called 
State Duma. As we know, the tsarist Duma is the nega- 
tion of the people's revolution, and this is very much 
to the advantage of our liberal bourgeoisie. As we know, 
the tsarist Duma provides "some slight" field of activ- 
ity for the wealthy bourgeoisie, and this is exactly what 
our bourgeois liberals need so much. That is why they 
base their entire "programme" and the conduct of all their 
activities on the assumption that the Duma will exist — 
the bankruptcy of the Duma would inevitably lead 
to the collapse of all their "plans." That is why they 
are so frightened by the boycott of the Duma; that is 
why they advise us to go into the Duma. "It will be a 
great mistake if we do not go into the tsarist Duma," 



184 J. V. STALIN 



they say through the mouth of their leader Yakushkin, 
It will indeed be "a great mistake," but for whom, the 
people, or the people's enemies? — that is the question. 

What is the function of the tsarist Duma? What do 
the "persons active in rural and urban affairs" have to 
say about this? 

". . . The first and main task of the Duma is to re- 
form the Duma itself," they say in their appeal.. 
"The voters must make the electors pledge themselves to 
elect candidates who, primarily, will want to reform the 
Duma," they say in the same appeal. 

What is to be the nature of this "reform"? That the 
Duma should have "the decisive voice in framing laws . . . 
and in the discussion of state revenue and expendi- 
ture . . . and the right to control the activities of the 
ministers." In other words, the electors must primarily 
demand an extension of the powers of the Duma. So 
that is what the "reform" of the Duma turns out to be! 
Who will get into the Duma? Mainly the big bourgeoisie. 
Clearly, the extension of the powers of the Duma will 
mean strengthening the big bourgeoisie politically. And 
so, the "persons active in rural and urban affairs" advise 
the people to elect bourgeois liberals to the Duma and 
to instruct them primarily to help to strengthen the big 
bourgeoisie! First of all, and most of all, it appears, 
we must take care to strengthen our enemies, and with 
our own hands — that is what Messieurs the liberal bour- 
geoisie are advising us to do today. Very "friendly" 
advice, we must say! But what about the rights of the 
people? Who is to take care of that? Oh, Messieurs the 
liberal bourgeoisie will not forget the people, we can 
be quite sure about that! They assure us that when they 



THE BOURGEOISIE IS LAYING A TRAP 185 

get into the Duma, and when they entrench themselves 
in it, they will demand rights for the people too. And 
with the aid of hypocritical utterances of this kind the 
"persons active in rural and urban affairs" hope to 
achieve their aim. ... So that is why they are advising 
us primarily to extend the powers of the Duma. . . . 

Bebel said: Whatever the enemy advises us to do is 
harmful for us. The enemy advises us to go into the 
Duma — clearly, going into the Duma will be harmful 
for us. The enemy advises that the powers of the Duma 
should be extended — clearly, the extension of the powers 
of the Duma will be harmful for us. What we must do 
is to undermine confidence in the Duma and discredit 
it in the eyes of the people. What we need is not the 
extension of the powers of the Duma, but the extension 
of the rights of the people. And if the enemy talks sweetly 
to us and promises us indefinite "rights," it shows that 
he is laying a trap for us and wants us, with our own 
hands, to build a fortress for him. We can expect nothing 
better from the bourgeois liberals. 

But what will you say about certain "Social-Demo- 
crats" who are preaching to us the tactics of the bourgeois 
liberals? What will you say about the Caucasian "minor- 
ity" which repeats, word for word, the insidious advice 
of our enemies? This, for example, is what the Caucasian 
"minority" says: "We deem it necessary to go into the 
State Duma" (see The Second Conference, p. 7). This 
is exactly what Messieurs the bourgeois liberals "deem 
necessary." 

The same "minority" advises us: "If the Bulygin 
Commission . . . grants the right to elect deputies only 
to the propertied classes, we must intervene in these 



186 J. V. STALIN 



elections and, by revolutionary means, compel the electors 
to elect progressive candidates and, in the Zemsky Sobor, 
demand a Constituent Assembly. Lastly, by every pos- 
sible means . . . compel the Zemsky Sobor either to 
convoke a Constituent Assembly ox proclaim itself such'" 
(see the Social-Democrat, No. 1). In other words, even 
if the propertied classes alone enjoy the franchise, even 
if only representatives of the propertied classes gather 
in the Duma — we must still demand that this assembly 
of representatives of the propertied classes be granted the 
powers of a Constituent Assembly! Even if the rights of 
the people are curtailed, we must still try to extend 
the powers of the Duma as much as possible! Needless 
to say, if the franchise is granted only to the propertied 
classes, the election of "progressive candidates" will 
remain an empty phrase. 

As you saw above, the bourgeois liberals preach the 
same thing. 

One of two things: either the bourgeois liberals 
have become Menshevised, or the Caucasian "minority" 
have become liberalised. 

Be that as it may, there can be no doubt that the 
newly-hatched "party" of the bourgeois liberals is skil- 
fully setting a trap. . . . 

What we must do now is — smash this trap, expose 
it for all to see, and wage a ruthless struggle against the 
liberal enemies of the people. 

Proletarians Brdzola 

(The Proletarian Struggle), No. 12 

October 15, 1905 

Unsigned 

Translated from the Georgian 



CITIZENS! 



The mighty giant — the proletariat of all Russia — is 
stirring again. . . . Russia is in the throes of a broad, 
country-wide strike movement. All over the boundless 
expanse of Russia life has come to a standstill as if by 
the wave of a magic wand. In St. Petersburg alone and 
on its railways, over a million workers have gone on 
strike. Moscow — the old, tranquil, sluggish capital, 
faithful to the Romanovs — is completely enveloped in 
a revolutionary conflagration. Kharkov, Kiev, Yekate- 
rinoslav and other cultural and industrial centres, the 
whole of central and south Russia, the whole of Poland 
and, lastly, the whole of the Caucasus, have come to a 
standstill and are threateningly looking the autocracy 
straight-in the face. 

What is going to happen? The whole of Russia is 
waiting with bated breath for an answer to this question. 
The proletariat is hurling a challenge at the accursed 
two-headed monster. Will this challenge be followed by 
a real clash, will the strike develop into an open, armed 
uprising, or will it, like previous strikes, end "peace- 
fully" and "subside"? 

Citizens! Whatever the answer to this question may 
be, in whichever way the present strike ends, one thing 
must be clear and beyond doubt to all: we are on the 



188 J. V. STALIN 



eve of an all-Russian, nation-wide uprising — and I he 
hour of this uprising is near. The general political strike 
now raging — of dimensions unprecedented and unex- 
ampled not only in the history of Russia but in the 
history of the whole world — may, perhaps, end today 
without developing into a nation-wide uprising, but to- 
morrow it will shake the country again with even greater 
force and develop into that mighty armed uprising which 
must settle the age-long contest between the Russian 
people and the tsarist autocracy and smash the head 
of this despicable monster. 

A nation-wide armed uprising — that is the fateful 
climax to which all the events that have recently taken 
place in the political and social life of our country are 
leading with historical inevitability! A nation-wide 
armed uprising — such is the great task that today con- 
fronts the proletariat of Russia and is imperatively 
demanding execution! 

Citizens! It is in the interests of all of you, except 
the handful of financial and landed aristocrats, to join 
in the rallying cry of the proletariat and to strive jointly 
with it to bring about this all-saving, nation-wide 
uprising. 

The criminal tsarist autocracy has brought our coun- 
try to the brink of doom. The ruination of a hundred mil- 
lion Russian peasants, the downtrodden and distressed 
condition of the working class, the excessive national 
debt and burdensome taxes, the lack of rights of the 
entire population, the endless tyranny and violence that 
reign in all spheres of life, and lastly, the utter insecurity 
of the lives and property of the citizens — such is the 
frightful picture that Russia presents today. This cannot 



CITIZENS! 189 



go on much longer! The autocracy, which has caused all 
these grim horrors, must be destroyed! And it will be 
destroyed! The autocracy realises this, and the more it 
realises it the more grim these horrors become, the more 
frightful becomes the hellish dance which it is whipping 
up around itself. In addition to the hundreds and thou- 
sands of peaceful citizens — workers whom it has killed 
in the streets of towns, in addition to the tens of thou- 
sands of workers and intellectuals, the best sons of the 
people, whom it has sent to languish in prison and in exile, 
in addition to the incessant murders and violence per- 
petrated by the tsar's bashi-bazouks in the countryside, 
among the peasantry all over Russia — and finally, the 
autocracy has invented new horrors. It has begun to 
sow enmity and hatred among the people themselves 
and to incite different strata of the population and whole 
nationalities against each other. It has armed and un- 
leashed Russian hooligans against the Russian workers 
and intellectuals, the unenlightened and starving masses 
of Russians and Moldavians in Bessarabia against the 
Jews, and lastly, the ignorant and fanatical Tatar 
masses against the Armenians. With the assistance of 
Tatars it has demolished one of the revolutionary centres 
of Russia and the most revolutionary centre of the Cau- 
casus — Baku — and has frightened the whole of the Arme- 
nian province away from the revolution. It has converted 
the entire Caucasus with its numerous tribes into a mili- 
tary camp where the population anticipates attack at 
any moment not only by the autocracy, but also by 
neighbouring tribes, the unfortunate victims of the autoc- 
racy. This cannot go on any longer! And only revolution 
can put a stop to it! 



190 J. V. STALIN 



It would be strange and ridiculous to expect the 
autocracy, which created all these hellish horrors, to 
be willing, or able, to stop them. No reform, no patch- 
ing of the autocracy — such as a State Duma, Zemstvos, 
and so forth, to which the liberal party wishes to limit 
itself — can put a stop to these horrors. On the contrary, 
every attempt in this direction, and every resistance to 
the revolutionary impulses of the proletariat, will only 
serve to intensify these horrors. 

Citizens! The proletariat, the most revolutionary 
class in our society, the class which has up to now borne 
the brunt of the struggle against the autocracy, and which 
will remain to the end its most determined and unrelent- 
ing enemy, is preparing for open, armed action. And it 
calls upon you, all classes of society, for assistance and 
support. Arm yourselves and help it to arm, and prepare 
for the decisive battle. 

Citizens! The hour of the uprising is near! We must 
meet it fully armed! Only if we do that, only by means of 
a general, country-wide and simultaneous armed uprising 
will we be able to vanquish our despicable foe — the ac- 
cursed tsarist autocracy — and on its ruins erect the free 
democratic republic that we need. 

Down With the Autocracy! 

Long Live the General Armed Uprising! 

Long Live the Democratic Republic! 

Long Live the Fighting Proletariat of Russia! 

Reproduced from the manifesto 
printed in October 1905 in ttie 
printing plant of the Tiflis 
Committee of the R.S.D.L.P. 



Signed: Tiflis Committee 



TO ALL THE WORKERS 



The thunder of revolution is roaring! The revolu- 
tionary people of Russia have risen and have surrounded 
the tsarist government in order to storm it! Red flags 
are flying, barricades are being erected, the people are 
taking to arms and are storming government offices. 
Again the call of the brave is heard; life, which had sub- 
sided, is seething again. The ship of the revolution has 
hoisted sail and is speeding towards freedom. That ship 
is being steered by the Russian proletariat. 

What do the proletarians of Russia want? Whither 
are they steering? 

Let us overthrow the tsarist Duma and set up a popu- 
lar Constituent Assembly — this is what the proletarians 
of Russia are saying today. The proletariat will not de- 
mand petty concessions from the government, it will 
not call for the repeal of "martial law" and "floggings" 
in some towns and villages. The proletariat will not 
stoop to such trifles. Whoever demands concessions from 
the government does not believe that the government 
will perish — but the proletariat confidently believes 
that it will. Whoever expects "favours" from the govern- 
ment has no confidence in the might of the revolution 
— but the proletariat is inspired with this confidence. 



192 J. V. STALIN 



No! The proletariat will not dissipate its energy in mak- 
ing senseless demands. It presents only one demand to 
the tsarist autocracy: Down with it! Death to it! And 
so, over the vast expanse of Russia the revolutionary 
cry of the workers rings out more and more boldly: 
Down with the State Duma! Long live a popular Con- 
stituent Assembly! This is the goal towards which the 
proletariat of Russia is striving today. 

The tsar will not grant a popular Constituent As- 
sembly, the tsar will not abolish his own autocracy — that 
he will not do! The curtailed "constitution" which he 
is "granting" is a temporary concession, the tsar's hypo- 
critical promise and nothing more! It goes without say- 
ing that we shall take advantage of this concession, we 
shall not refuse to wrest from the crow a nut with 
which to smash its head. But the fact remains that the 
people can place no trust in the tsar's promises — they 
must trust only themselves; they must rely only on 
their own strength: the liberation of the people must 
be brought about by the people themselves. Only on 
the bones of the oppressors can the people's freedom 
be erected, only with the blood of the oppressors can 
the soil be fertilised for the sovereignty of the people! 
Only when the armed people come out headed by the 
proletariat and raise the banner of a general uprising 
can the tsarist government, which rests on bayonets, 
be overthrown. Not empty phrases, not senseless "self- 
arming," but real arming and an armed uprising — 
that is what the proletarians of the whole of Russia 
are steering towards today. 

A victorious uprising will lead to the defeat of 
the government. But vanquished governments have 



TO ALL THE WORKERS 193 



often risen to their feet again. It may rise to its feet 
again in our country. On the morrow of the uprising, 
the dark forces which lay low during the uprising will 
creep out of their lairs and try to put the government 
on its feet again. That is how vanquished governments 
rise from the dead. The people must curb these dark 
forces without fail, they must make them bite the dust. 
But to do this the victorious people must, on the very 
morrow of the uprising, arm to a man, young and old, 
form themselves into a revolutionary army, and be ever 
ready to protect their hard-won rights by force of arms. 

Only when the victorious people have formed them- 
selves into a revolutionary army will they be able fi- 
nally to crush the dark forces which go into hiding. Only 
a revolutionary army can lend force to the actions of 
a provisional government, only a provisional government 
can convoke a popular Constituent Assembly which 
must establish a democratic republic. A revolutionary 
army and a revolutionary provisional government — this 
is the goal towards which the proletarians of Russia 
are striving today. 

Such is the path that the Russian revolution has taken. 
This path leads to the sovereignty of the people, and the 
proletariat calls upon all the friends of the people to 
march along this path. 

The tsarist autocracy is barring the road of the peo- 
ple's revolution, it wants with the aid of the manifesto 
it issued yesterday to check this great movement — clear- 
ly, the waves of the revolution will engulf the tsarist 
autocracy and sweep it away. . . . 

Contempt and hatred for all those who fail to take 
the path of the proletariat — they are despicably 



194 J. V. STALIN 



betraying the revolution! Shame upon those who, having 
taken this path in fact, say something else in words — 
they cravenly fear the truth! 

We do not fear the truth, we do not fear revolution! 
Let the thunder roar still louder, let the storm rage more 
fiercely! The hour of victory is near! 

Let us then enthusiastically proclaim the slogans 
of the proletariat of Russia: 

Down With the State Duma! 

Long Live the Armed Uprising! 

Long Live the Revolutionary Army! 

Long Live the Provisional Revolutionary Government! 

Long Live the Popular Constituent Assembly! 

Long Live the Democratic Republic! 

Long Live the Proletariat! 

Reproduced from the manifesto printed 
on October 19, 1905 at the underground 
(Avlabar) printing plant of the Caucasian 
Union of the R.S.D.L.P. 



Signed: Tiflis Committee 
Translated from the Georgian 



TIFLIS, NOVEMBER 20, 1905 



The Great Russian Revolution has started! We have 
already passed through the first stormy act of this revo- 
lution, an act whose formal close was the Manifesto of 
October 17. The autocratic tsar "by the grace of 
God" bowed his "crowned head" to the revolutionary 
people and promised them "the unshakable foundations 
of civil liberty." . . . 

But this was only the first act. It was only the be- 
ginning of the end. We are on the threshold of great events 
that will be worthy of the Great Russian Revolution. 
These events are advancing upon us with the inexorable 
rigour of history, with iron necessity. The tsar and 
the people, the autocracy of the tsar and the sovereignty 
of the people — are two antagonistic, diametrically op- 
posed principles. The defeat of one and the victory of the 
other can come about only as the result of a decisive 
clash between the two, as the result of a desperate, life- 
and-death struggle. This struggle has not yet taken 
place. It still lies ahead. And the mighty Titan of the 
Russian revolution — the all-Russian proletariat — is pre- 
paring for it with might and main. 

The liberal bourgeoisie is trying to avert this fateful 
clash. It is of the opinion that the time has come to put 



196 J. V. STALIN 



a stop to "anarchy" and to start peaceful, "constructive" 
work, the work of "state building." It is right. This 
bourgeoisie is satisfied with what the proletariat has 
already torn from tsarism by its first revolutionary ac- 
tion. It can now confidently conclude an alliance — on 
advantageous terms — with the tsarist government and 
by combined efforts attack the common enemy, attack its 
"gravedigger" — the revolutionary proletariat. Bourgeois 
freedom, freedom to exploit, is already ensured, and the 
bourgeoisie is quite satisfied. Never having been rev- 
olutionary, the Russian bourgeoisie is already openly 
going over to the side of reaction. A good riddance! We 
shall not grieve very much over this. The fate of the 
revolution was never in the hands of liberalism. The 
course and the outcome of the Russian revolution will 
be determined entirely by the conduct of the revolu- 
tionary proletariat and the revolutionary peasantry. 

Led by Social-Democracy, the revolutionary urban 
proletariat and the revolutionary peasantry which is 
following it, will, in spite of all the machinations of the 
liberals, staunchly continue their struggle until they 
achieve the complete overthrow of the autocracy and 
erect a free democratic republic on its ruins. 

Such is the immediate political task of the socialist 
proletariat, such is its aim in the present revolution; 
and, backed by the peasantry, it will achieve its aim 
at all costs. 

It has also clearly and definitely mapped the road 
which must lead it to a democratic republic. 

1) The decisive, desperate clash to which we re- 
ferred above, 2) a revolutionary army organised in the 
course of this "clash," 3) the democratic dictatorship 



TIFLIS, NOVEMBER 20, 1905 197 

of the proletariat and peasantry in the shape of a provi- 
sional revolutionary government, which will spring up 
as a result of the victorious "clash," 4) a Constituent 
Assembly convened by that government on the basis of 
universal, direct, equal and secret suffrage — such are the 
stages through which the Great Russian Revolution must 
pass before it arrives at the desired goal 

No threats on the part of the government, no high- 
sounding tsarist manifestoes, no provisional governments 
of the type of the Witte government which the autocracy 
set up to save itself, no State Duma convened by the 
tsarist government, even if on the basis of universal, 
etc., suffrage — can turn the proletariat from the only 
true revolutionary path which must lead it to the demo- 
cratic republic. 

Will the proletariat have strength enough to reach 
the end of this path, will it have strength enough to 
emerge with honour from the gigantic, bloody struggle 
which awaits it on this path? 

Yes, it will! 

That is what the proletariat itself thinks, and it is 
boldly and resolutely preparing for battle. 

Kavkazsky Rahochy Listok 

{Caucasian Workers' Newssheet), No. 1, 

November 20, 1905 

Unsigned 



TWO CLASHES 

(Concerning January 9) 



You probably remember January 9 of last year. . . . 
That was the day on which the St. Petersburg proletariat 
came face to face with the tsarist government and, without 
wishing to do so, clashed with it. Yes, without wishing 
to do so, for the proletariat went peacefully to the tsar 
for "bread and justice," but was met as an enemy, with 
a hail of bullets. It had placed its hopes in portraits 
of the tsar and in church banners, but both portraits 
and banners were torn into shreds and thrown into its 
face, thus providing glaring proof that arms must be 
countered only by arms. And it took to arms wherever 
they were available — it took to arms in order to meet 
the enemy as an enemy and to wreak vengeance on him. 
But, leaving thousands of victims on the battle-field and 
sustaining heavy losses, the proletariat retreated, with 
anger burning in its breast. . . . 

This is what January 9 of last year reminds us of. 

Today, when the proletariat of Russia is commemo- 
rating January 9, it is not out of place to ask: Why did 
the St. Petersburg proletariat retreat after the clash last 
year, and in what way does that clash differ from the 
general clash that took place in December? 



TWO CLASHES 199 



First of all it retreated because then it lacked that 
minimum of revolutionary consciousness that is abso- 
lutely essential if an uprising is to be victorious. Can 
the proletariat that goes with prayer and hope to a bloody 
tsar who has based his entire existence on the oppression 
of the people, can the proletariat which trustfully goes 
to its sworn enemy to beg "a crumb of charity" — can 
such people really gain the upper hand in street 
fighting? . . . 

True, later on, after a little time had passed, rifle 
volleys opened the eyes of the deceived proletariat and 
revealed the vile features of the autocracy; true, after 
that the proletariat began to exclaim angrily: "The tsar 
gave it to us — we'll now give it to him!" But what is 
the use of that when you are unarmed? What can you do 
with bare hands in street fighting, even if you are en- 
lightened? For does not an enemy bullet pierce an enlight- 
ened head as easily as an unenlightened one? 

Yes, lack of arms — that was the second reason for the 
retreat of the St. Petersburg proletariat. 

But what could St. Petersburg have done alone even 
if it had possessed arms? When blood was flowing in 
St. Petersburg and barricades were being erected, nobody 
raised a finger in other towns — that is why the govern- 
ment was able to bring in troops from other places and 
flood the streets with blood. It was only afterwards, 
when the St. Petersburg proletariat had buried its fallen 
comrades and had returned to its everyday occupations 
— only then was the cry of workers on strike heard in 
different towns: "Greetings to the St. Petersburg heroes!" 
But of what use were these belated greetings to any- 
body? That is why the government did not take these 



200 J. V. STALIN 



sporadic and unorganised actions seriously; the proletar- 
iat was split up in separate groups, so the government 
was able to scatter it without much effort. 

Hence, the third reason for the retreat of the 
St. Petersburg proletariat was the absence of an organ- 
ised general uprising, the unorganised action of the 
proletariat. 

But who was there to organise a general uprising? 
The people as a whole could not undertake this 
task, and the vanguard of the proletariat — the proletar- 
ian party — was itself unorganised, for it was torn by 
internal disagreements. The internal war, the split in 
the party, weakened it more and more every day. It is 
not surprising that the young party, split into two parts, 
was unable to undertake the task of organising a gen- 
eral uprising. 

Hence, the fourth reason for the proletariat's retreat 
was the absence of a single and united party. 

And lastly, if the peasantry and the troops failed 
to join the uprising and infuse fresh strength into 
it, it was because they could not see any exceptional 
strength in the feeble and short-lived uprising, and, 
as is common knowledge, nobody joins the feeble. 

That is why the heroic proletariat of St. Petersburg 
retreated in January last year. 



Time passed. Roused by the crisis and lack of rights, 
the proletariat prepared for another clash. Those who 
thought that the losses sustained on January 9 would 
crush the fighting spirit of the proletariat were mis- 
taken — on the contrary, it prepared for the "last" clash 



TWO CLASHES 201 



with greater ardour and devotion, it fought the troops 
and Cossacks with greater courage and determination, 
The revolt of the sailors in the Black Sea and Baltic 
Sea, the revolt of the workers in Odessa, Lodz and other 
towns, and the continuous clashes between the peasants 
and the police clearly revealed how unquenchable was 
the revolutionary fire burning in the breasts of the people. 

The proletariat has recently been acquiring with 
amazing rapidity the revolutionary consciousness it 
lacked on January 9. It is said that ten years of propa- 
ganda could not have brought about such an increase 
in the proletariat's class consciousness as these days of 
uprising have done. That is so, nor could it be other- 
wise, for the process of class conflicts is a great school 
in which the revolutionary consciousness of the people 
grows hour by hour. 

A general armed uprising, which at first was preached 
only by a small group of the proletariat, an armed 
uprising, about which some comrades were even doubt- 
ful, gradually won the sympathy of the proletariat — 
and it feverishly organised Red detachments, procured 
arms, etc. The October general strike clearly demonstrat- 
ed the feasibility of simultaneous action by the proletar- 
iat. This, in its turn, proved the feasibility of an organ- 
ised uprising — and the proletariat resolutely took this 
path. 

All that was needed was a united party, a single 
and indivisible Social-Democratic Party to direct the 
organisation of the general uprising, to co-ordinate 
the preparations for the revolution that were going on 
separately in different towns, and to take the initiative 
in the assault. That was all the more necessary because 



202 J. V. STALIN 



life itself was preparing the ground or a new upsurge — 
day by day, the crisis in the towns, starvation in the 
countryside, and other factors of a similar nature 
were making another revolutionary upheaval inevi- 
table. The trouble was that such a party was then only 
in the process of formation; enfeebled by the split, the 
party was only just recovering and beginning to unite 
its ranks. 

It was precisely at that moment that the proletariat 
of Russia entered into the second clash, the glorious 
December clash. 

Let us now discuss this clash. 

In discussing the January clash we said that it 
lacked revolutionary consciousness; as regards the De- 
cember clash we must say that this consciousness existed. 
Eleven months of revolutionary storm had sufficiently 
opened the eyes of the militant proletariat of Russia, 
and the slogans: Down with the autocracy! Long live the 
democratic republic! became the slogans of the day, 
the slogans of the masses. This time you saw no church 
banners, no icons, no portraits of the tsar — instead, red 
flags fluttered and portraits of Marx and Engels were 
carried. This time you heard no singing of psalms or of 
"God Save the Tsar" — instead, the strains of the Mar- 
seillaise and the Varshavyanka deafened the tyrants. 

Thus, in respect to revolutionary consciousness, the 
December clash differed radically from the January clash. 

In the January clash there was a lack of arms, the 
people went into battle unarmed. The December clash 
marked a step forward, all the fighters now rushed for 
arms, with revolvers, rifles, bombs and in some places 
even machine guns in their hands. Procure arms by 



TWO CLASHES 203 



force of arms — this became the slogan of the day. Every- 
body sought arms, everybody felt the need for arms, 
the only sad thing about it was that very few arms were 
procurable, and only an inconsiderable number of prole- 
tarians could come out armed. 

The January uprising was utterly sporadic and 
unorganised; in it everybody acted haphazard. In this 
respect, too, the December uprising marked a step 
forward. The St. Petersburg and Moscow Soviets of 
Workers' Deputies, and the "majority" and "minority" 
centres "took measures" as far as possible to make the 
revolutionary action simultaneous. They called upon the 
proletariat of Russia to launch a simultaneous offensive. 
Nothing of the kind was done during the January upris- 
ing. But that call had not been preceded by pro- 
longed and persevering Party activity in preparation for 
the uprising, and so the call remained a call, and the 
action turned out to be sporadic and unorganised. There 
existed only the desire for a simultaneous and organised 
uprising. 

The January uprising was "led" mainly by the 
Gapons. In this respect the December uprising had 
the advantage in that the Social-Democrats were at the 
head of it. The sad thing, however, was that the latter 
were split into separate groups, that they did not consti- 
tute a single united party, and, therefore, could not co- 
ordinate their activities. Once again the uprising found 
the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party unprepared 
and divided. . . . 

The January clash had no plan, it was not guided 
by any definite policy, the question whether to take the 
offensive or defensive did not confront it. The December 



204 J. V. STALIN 



clash merely had the advantage that it clearly raised 
this question, but it did so only in the course of the 
struggle, not at the very beginning. As regards the 
answer to this question, the December uprising re- 
vealed the same weakness as the January one. Had the 
Moscow revolutionaries adhered to the policy of offen- 
sive from the very beginning, had they at the very begin- 
ning attacked, say, the Nikolayevsky Railway Station 
and captured it, the uprising would, of course, have last- 
ed longer and would have taken a more desirable turn. 
Or had the Lettish revolutionaries, for example, reso- 
lutely pursued a policy of offensive and had not wavered, 
then they undoubtedly would first of all have captured 
batteries of artillery, thereby depriving the authorities 
of all support; for the authorities had at first allowed 
the revolutionaries to capture towns, but later they 
passed to the offensive and with the aid of artillery 
recaptured the places they had lost.^"* The same must 
be said about other towns. Marx was right when he said: 
In an uprising only audacity conquers, and only those 
who adhere to the policy of offensive can be audacious 
to the end. 

This was the cause of the proletariat's retreat in the 
middle of December. 

If the overwhelming mass of the peasantry and 
troops failed to join in the December clash, if that clash 
even roused dissatisfaction among certain "democratic" 
circles — it was because it lacked that strength and dura- 
bility which are so necessary for the uprising to 
spread and be victorious. 

From what has been said it is clear what we, the 
Russian Social-Democrats, must do today. 



TWO CLASHES 205 



Firstly, our task is to complete what we have begun — 
to form a single and indivisible party. The all-Russian 
conferences of the "majority" and the "minority" have 
already drawn up the organisational principles of unifi- 
cation. Lenin's formula defining membership of the 
Party, and democratic centralism, have been accepted. 
The respective centres that direct ideological and prac- 
tical activities have already merged, and the merging of 
the local organisations is already almost completed. 
All that is needed is a Unity Congress that will officially 
endorse the unification that has actually taken place 
and thereby give us a single and indivisible Russian 
Social-Democratic Labour Party. Our task is to facilitate 
the execution of this task, which is so precious to us, 
and to make careful preparations for the Unity Congress, 
which, as is known, should open in the very near future. 

Secondly, our task is to help the Party to organise 
the armed uprising, actively to intervene in this 
sacred cause and to work tirelessly for it. Our task is 
to multiply the Red detachments, to train and weld 
them together; our task is to procure arms by force of 
arms, to reconnoitre the disposition of government in- 
stitutions, calculate the enemy's forces, study his strong 
and weak sides, and draw up a plan for the uprising 
accordingly. Our task is to conduct systematic agitation 
in favour of an uprising in the army and in the vil- 
lages, especially in those villages that are situated close 
to towns, to arm the reliable elements in them, etc., 
etc. . . . 

Thirdly, our task is to cast away all hesitation, to 
condemn all indefiniteness, and resolutely to pursue a 
policy of offensive. . . . 



206 J. V. STALIN 



In short, a united party, an uprising organised by 
the Party, and a policy of offensive — this is what we 
need today to achieve the victory of the uprising. 

And the more famine in the countryside and the 
industrial crisis in the towns become intensified and 
grow, the more acute and imperative does this task 
become. 

Some people, it appears, are beset with doubts about 
the correctness of this elementary truth, and they ask 
in a spirit of despair: What can the Party, even if it is 
united, do if it fails to rally the proletariat around itself? 
The proletariat, they say, is routed, it has lost hope and 
is not in the mood to take the initiative; we must, they 
say, now expect salvation to come from the countryside; 
the initiative must come from there, etc. One cannot 
help saying that the comrades who argue in this way are 
profoundly mistaken. The proletariat is by no means 
routed, for the rout of the proletariat means its death; 
on the contrary, it is as much alive as it was before and 
is gaining strength every day. It has merely retreated in 
order, after mustering its forces, to enter the final clash 
with the tsarist government. 

When, on December 15, the Soviet of Workers' Dep- 
uties of Moscow — the very Moscow which in fact led 
the December uprising — publicly announced: We are 
temporarily suspending the struggle in order to make 
serious preparations to raise the banner of an uprising 
again — it expressed the cherished thoughts of the entire 
Russian proletariat. 

And if some comrades nevertheless deny facts, if 
they no longer place their hopes in the proletariat and 
now clutch at the rural bourgeoisie — the question is: 



TWO CLASHES 207 



With whom are we dealing, with Socialist-Revolution- 
aries or Social-Democrats? For no Social-Democrat will 
doubt the truth that the actual (and not only ideologi- 
cal) leader of the rural population is the urban pro- 
letariat. 

At one time we were assured that the autocracy was 
crushed after October 17, but we did not believe it, be- 
cause the rout of the autocracy means its death; but far 
from being dead, it mustered fresh forces for another at- 
tack. We said that the autocracy had only retreated. 
It turned out that we were right. . . . 

No, comrades! The proletariat of Russia is not 
defeated, it has only retreated and is now preparing for 
fresh glorious battles. The proletariat of Russia will 
not lower its blood-stained banner; it will yield the lead- 
ership of the uprising to no one; it will be the only 
worthy leader of the Russian revolution. 



January 7, 1906 

Reproduced from the pamphlet 

published by the Caucasian 

Union Committee of the R.S.D.L.P. 

Translated from the Georgian 



THE STATE DUMA AND THE TACTICS 
OF SOCIAL-DEMOCRACY^' 



You have no doubt heard of the emancipation of the 
peasants. That was the time when the government received 
a double blow: one from outside — defeat in the Crimea, 
and one inside — the peasant movement. That is why 
the government, harassed on two sides, was compelled to 
yield and talk about emancipating the peasants: "We 
must emancipate the peasants ourselves from above, 
otherwise the people will rise in revolt and secure their 
emancipation themselves from below." We know what 
that "emancipation from above" was. . . . The fact 
that the people at that time allowed themselves to be 
deceived, that the government's hypocritical plans suc- 
ceeded, that it strengthened its position by means of these 
reforms and thereby postponed the victory of the people, 
shows, among other things, that the people were still 
unenlightened and could easily be deceived. 

The same thing is being repeated in the life of Rus- 
sia today. As is well known, today, too, the government 
is receiving a double blow: from outside — defeat in Man- 
churia, and inside — the people's revolution. And the 
government, harassed on two sides, has been com- 
pelled to yield again and, as it did then, it is again 



STATE DUMA AND TACTICS OF SOCIAL-DEMOCRACY 209 

talking about "reforms from above": "We must give 
the people a State Duma from above, otherwise the people 
will rise in revolt and convoke a Constituent Assembly 
themselves from below." Thus, by convening the Duma, 
they want to subdue the people's revolution in the 
same way as, once upon a time, they subdued the great 
peasant movement by "emancipating the peasants." 

Hence, our task is — to frustrate with all determina- 
tion the plans of the reaction, to sweep away the State 
Duma, and thereby clear the road for the people's revo- 
lution. 

But what will the Duma be? What will be its compo- 
sition? 

The Duma will be a mongrel parliament. Nomi- 
nally, it will enjoy powers to decide; but actually, it 
will have only advisory powers, because the Upper Cham- 
ber, and a government armed to the teeth, will stand 
over it in the capacity of censors. The Manifesto definite- 
ly states that no decision of the Duma can be put into 
force unless it is approved by the Upper Chamber and 
the tsar. 

The Duma will not be a people's parliament, it will 
be a parliament of the enemies of the people, because 
voting in the election of the Duma will be neither univer- 
sal, equal, direct nor secret. The paltry electoral rights 
that are granted to the workers exist only on paper. Of 
the 98 electors who are to elect the Duma deputies for 
the Tiflis Gubernia, only two can be workers; the other 
96 electors must belong to other classes — that is what the 
Manifesto says. Of the 32 electors who are to elect the 
Duma deputies for the Batum and Sukhum areas, only 
one can be a representative of the workers; the other 



210 J. V. STALIN 



31 electors must come from other classes — that is what 
the Manifesto says. The same thing applies to the other 
gubernias. Needless to say, only representatives of the 
other classes will be elected to the Duma. Not one deputy 
from the workers, not one vote for the workers — this is the 
basis upon which the Duma is being built. If to all this 
we add martial law, if we bear in mind the suppression 
of freedom of speech, press, assembly and association, 
then it will be self-evident what kind of people will 
gather in the tsar's Duma. . . . 

Needless to say, this makes it more than ever neces- 
sary resolutely to strive to sweep away this Duma and 
to raise the banner of revolution. 

How can we sweep away the Duma — by participat- 
ing in the elections or by boycotting them? — that is the 
question now. 

Some say: We must certainly participate in the elec- 
tions in order to entangle the reaction in its own snare 
and, thereby, utterly wreck the State Duma. 

Others say in answer to this: By participating in 
the elections you will involuntarily help the reaction 
to set up the Duma and you will fall right into the trap 
laid by the reaction. And that means: first, you will 
create a tsarist Duma in conjunction with the reaction, 
and then life will compel you to try to wreck the Duma 
which you yourselves have created. This line is incom- 
patible with the principles of our policy. One of two 
things: either keep out of the elections and proceed to 
wreck the Duma, or abandon the idea of wrecking the 
Duma and proceed with the elections so that you shall 
not have to destroy what you yourselves have created. 

Clearly, the only correct path is active boycott, by 



STATE DUMA AND TACTICS OF SOCIAL-DEMOCRACY 211 

means of which we shall isolate the reaction from the 
people, organise the wrecking of the Duma, and thereby 
cut the ground completely from under the feet of this 
mongrel parliament. 

That is how the advocates of a boycott argue. 

Which of the two sides is right? 

To pursue genuinely Social-Democratic tactics two 
conditions are necessary: first, that those tactics should 
not run counter to the course of social life; and second, 
that they should raise the revolutionary spirit of the 
masses higher and higher. 

The tactics of participating in the elections run coun- 
ter to the course of social life, for life is sapping the 
foundations of the Duma, whereas participation in the 
elections will strengthen those foundations; consequent- 
ly, participation runs counter to life. 

The boycott tactics, however, spring automatically 
from the course of the revolution, for, jointly with the 
revolution, they discredit and sap the foundations of the 
police Duma from the very outset. 

The tactics of participating in the elections weaken 
the revolutionary spirit of the people, for the advocates 
of participation call upon the people to take part in 
police-controlled elections and not to resort to revolu- 
tionary action; they see salvation in ballot papers and 
not in action by the people. But the police-controlled 
elections will give the people a false idea of what the 
State Duma is; they will rouse false hopes and the people 
will involuntarily think: evidently the Duma is not so 
bad, otherwise the Social-Democrats would not advise 
us to take part in electing it; perhaps fortune will smile 
on us and the Duma will benefit us. 



212 J. V. STALIN 



The boycott tactics, however, do not sow any false 
hopes about the Duma, but openly and unambiguously 
say that salvation lies only in the victorious action of 
the people, that the emancipation of the people can be 
achieved only by the people themselves; and as the Duma 
is an obstacle to this, we must set to work at once to re- 
move it. In this case, the people rely only upon them- 
selves and from the very outset take a hostile stand 
against the Duma as the citadel of reaction; and that will 
raise the revolutionary spirit of the people higher and 
higher and thereby prepare the ground for general vic- 
torious action. 

Revolutionary tactics must be clear, distinct and 
definite; the boycott tactics possess these qualities. 

It is said: verbal agitation alone is not enough; 
the masses must be convinced by facts that the Duma is 
useless and this will help to wreck it. For this purpose 
participation in the elections and not active boycott is 
needed. 

In answer to this we say the following. It goes with- 
out saying that agitation with facts is far more important 
than verbal explanation. The very reason for our going to 
people's election meetings is to demonstrate to the people, 
in conflict with other parties, in collisions with them, the 
perfidy of the reaction and the bourgeoisie, and in this 
way "agitate" the electors "with facts." If this does not 
satisfy the comrades, if to all this they add participation 
in the election, then we must say that, taken by them- 
selves, elections — the dropping or not dropping of a ballot 
paper into a ballot box — do not add one iota either to 
"factual" or to "verbal" agitation. But the harm caused 
by this is great, because, by this "agitation with facts," 



STATE DUMA AND TACTICS OF SOCIAL-DEMOCRACY 213 

the advocates of participation involuntarily sanction 
the setting up of the Duma, and thereby strength- 
en the ground beneath it. How do those comrades in- 
tend to compensate for the great harm thus done? By 
dropping ballot papers into the ballot box? This is not 
even worth discussing. 

On the other hand, there must also be a limit to "agi- 
tation with facts." When Gapon marched at the head of 
the St. Petersburg workers with crosses and icons he also 
said: the people believe in the benevolence of the tsar, 
they are not yet convinced that the government is crimi- 
nal, and we must, therefore, lead them to the tsar's palace. 
Gapon was mistaken, of course. His tactics were harmful 
tactics, as January 9 proved. That shows that we must 
give Gapon tactics the widest possible berth. The boy- 
cott tactics, however, are the only tactics that utterly 
refute Gapon's sophistry. 

It is said: the boycott will separate the masses from 
their vanguard, because, with the boycott, only the van- 
guard will follow you; the masses, however, will remain 
with the reactionaries and liberals, who will pull them 
over to their side. 

To that we reply that where this takes place the 
masses evidently sympathise with the other parties 
and will not anyhow elect Social-Democrats as their 
delegates, however much we may participate in the 
elections. Elections by themselves cannot possibly revo- 
lutionise the masses! As regards agitation in connec- 
tion with the elections, it is being conducted by both 
sides, with the difference, however, that the advocates of 
the boycott are conducting more uncompromising and de- 
termined agitation against the Duma than the advocates 



214 J. V. STALIN 



of participation in the elections, because sharp criti- 
cism of the Duma may induce the masses to abstain from 
voting, and this does not enter into the plans of the advo- 
cates of participation in the elections. If this agitation 
proves effective, the people will rally around the Social- 
Democrats; and when the Social-Democrats call for a 
boycott of the Duma, then the people will at once follow 
them and the reactionaries will be left only with their 
infamous hooligans. If, however, the agitation "has no 
effect," then the elections will result in nothing but 
harm, because by employing the tactics of going into the 
Duma we would endorse the activities of the reaction- 
aries. As you see, the boycott is the best means of rally- 
ing the people around Social-Democracy, in those places, 
of course, where it is possible to rally them; but where 
it is not, the elections can result in nothing but harm. 

Moreover, the tactics of going into the Duma dim 
the revolutionary consciousness of the people. The point 
is that all the reactionary and liberal parties are partici- 
pating in the elections. What difference is there between 
them and the revolutionaries? To this question the partic- 
ipation tactics fail to give the masses a straight answer. 
The masses might easily confuse the non-revolutionary 
Cadets with the revolutionary Social-Democrats. The 
boycott tactics, however, draw a sharp line between 
revolutionaries and the non-revolutionaries who want to 
save the foundations of the old regime with the aid of 
the Duma. And the drawing of this line is extremely 
important for the revolutionary enlightenment of the 
people. 

And lastly, we are told that with the aid of the 
elections we shall create Soviets of Workers' Deputies, 



STATE DUMA AND TACTICS OF SOCIAL-DEMOCRACY 215 

and thereby unite the revolutionary masses organisa- 
tionally. 

To this we answer that under present conditions, 
when even the most inoffensive meetings are suppressed, 
it will be absolutely impossible for Soviets of Workers' 
Deputies to function, and, consequently, to set this task 
is a piece of self-deception. 

Thus, the participation tactics involuntarily serve 
to strengthen the tsarist Duma, weaken the revolutionary 
spirit of the masses, dim the revolutionary consciousness 
of the people, are unable to create any revolutionary organi- 
sations, run counter to the development of social life, 
and therefore should be rejected by Social-Democracy. 

Boycott tactics — this is the direction in which the 
development of the revolution is now going. This is the 
direction in which Social-Democracy, too, should go. 

Gantiadi (The Dawn), No. 3, 
March 8, 1906 

Signed: J. Besoshvili 
Translated from the Georgian 



THE AGRARIAN QUESTION 



I 



The old order is breaking up, the countryside is in 
upheaval. The peasantry, who only yesterday were 
crushed and downtrodden, are today rising to their 
feet and straightening their backs. The peasant move- 
ment, which only yesterday was helpless, is today sweep- 
ing like a turbulent flood against the old order: get out 
of the way — or I'll sweep you away! "The peasants want 
the landlords' land," "The peasants want to abolish the 
remnants of serfdom" — such are the voices now heard 
in the rebellious villages and hamlets of Russia. 

Those who count on silencing the peasants by means 
of bullets are mistaken: life has shown us that this 
only serves still further to inflame and intensify the 
revolutionary peasant movement. 

And those who try to pacify the peasants with empty 
promises and "peasants' banks" are also mistaken: the 
peasants want land, they dream of this land, and, of 
course, they will not be satisfied until they have seized 
the landlords' land. Of what use are empty promises and 
"peasants' banks" to them? 

The peasants want to seize the landlords' land. In 
this way they seek to abolish the remnants of serfdom — 



THE AGRARIAN QUESTION 217 

and those who are not betraying the peasants must strive 
to settle the agrarian question precisely on this basis. 

But how are the peasants to gain possession of the 
landlords' land? 

It is said that the only way is — "purchase on easy 
terms." The government and the landlords have plenty 
of spare land, these gentlemen tell us; if the peasants pur- 
chase this land, everything will settle itself, and in this 
way the wolves will be sated and the sheep remain whole. 
But they do not ask what the peasants are to buy the 
land with after they have been stripped not only of their 
money but also of their very skins. They do not stop to 
think that in buying the land the peasants will have 
only bad land foisted upon them, while the landlords will 
keep the good land for themselves, as they succeeded in 
doing during the "emancipation of the serfs"! Besides, 
why should the peasants buy the land which has been 
theirs for ages? Have not both the government's and the 
landlords' lands been watered by the sweat of the peas- 
ants? Did not these lands belong to the peasants? Were 
not the peasants deprived of this heritage of their fathers 
and grandfathers? What justice is there in the demand 
that the peasants should buy the very land that was 
taken from them? And is the question of the peasant 
movement a question of buying and selling? Is not the 
aim of the peasant movement to emancipate the peas- 
ants? Who will free the peasants from the yoke of serf- 
dom if not the peasants themselves? And yet, these gen- 
tlemen assure us that the landlords will emancipate the 
peasants, if only they are given a little hard cash. And, 
believe it or not, this "emancipation," it seems, is to 
be carried out under the direction of the tsarist 



218 J. V. STALIN 



bureaucracy, the selfsame bureaucracy which more than 
once has met the starving peasants with cannons and 
machine guns! . . . 

No! Buying out the land will not save the peasant. 
Whoever advises them to accept "purchase on easy terms" 
is a traitor, because he is trying to catch the peasants 
in the real-estate agent's net and does not want the 
emancipation of the peasants to be brought about by 
the peasants themselves. 

Since the peasants want to seize the landlords' land, 
since they must abolish the survivals of serfdom in this 
way, since "purchase on easy terms" will not save them, 
since the emancipation of the peasants must be brought 
about by the peasants themselves, then there cannot 
be the slightest doubt that the only way is to take the 
land from the landlords, that is, to confiscate these 
lands. 

That is the way out. 

The question is — how far should this confiscation 
go? Has it any limit, should the peasants take only part 
of the land, or all of it? 

Some say that to take all the land would be going 
too far, that it is sufficient to take part of the land to 
satisfy the peasants. Let us assume that it is so, but 
what is to be done if the peasants demand more? We can- 
not stand in their way and say: Halt! Don't go any 
further! That would be reactionary! And have not 
events in Russia shown that the peasants are actually 
demanding the confiscation of all the landlords' land? 
Besides, what does "taking a part" mean? What part 
should be taken from the landlords, one half or one 
third? Who is to settle this question — the landlords alone. 



THE AGRARIAN QUESTION 219 

or the landlords in conjunction with the peasants? As 
you see, this still leaves plenty of scope for the real- 
estate agent, there is still scope for bargaining between 
the landlords and the peasants; and this is fundamentally 
opposed to the task of emancipating the peasants. The 
peasants must, once and for all, get accustomed to the 
idea that it is necessary not to bargain with the land- 
lords, but to fight them. We must not mend the yoke of 
serfdom, but smash it, so as to abolish the remnants 
of serfdom forever. To "take only part" means patching 
up the survivals of serfdom, which is incompatible with 
the task of emancipating the peasants. 

Clearly, the only way is to take all the land from 
the landlords. That alone will enable the peasant move- 
ment to achieve its aim, that alone can stimulate the 
energy of the people, that alone can sweep away the 
fossilised remnants of serfdom. 

Thus: the present movement in the countryside is 
a democratic peasant movement. The aim of this move- 
ment is to abolish the remnants of serfdom. To abolish 
these remnants it is necessary to confiscate all land- 
lord and government lands. 

Certain gentlemen ask us accusingly: Why did not 
Social-Democracy demand the confiscation of all the 
land before? Why, until recently, did it speak only about 
confiscating the "otrezki"*? 

Because, gentlemen, in 1903, when the Party talked 
about the "otrezki," the Russian peasantry had not 
yet been drawn into the movement. It was the Party's 



* Literally "cuts." The plots of land the landlords took from the 
peasants when serfdom was abolished in Russia in 1861. — Tr. 



220 J. V. STALIN 



duty to carry into the countryside a slogan that would 
fire the peasants' hearts and rouse them against the rem- 
nants of serfdom. Confiscate the "otrezki" was precisely 
such a slogan, because the "otrezki" vividly reminded 
the Russian peasants of the injustice of the remnants 
of serfdom. 

But times have changed. The peasant movement has 
grown. It is no longer necessary to call it into being — 
it is already in full swing. The question today is not how 
to get the peasants moving, but what the peasants who 
are already moving should demand. Clearly, here definite 
demands are what is needed, and so the Party tells the 
peasants that they ought to demand the confiscation of 
all landlord and government lands. 

This shows that everything has its time and place, 
and this applies to the "otrezki" as well as to the confisca- 
tion of all the land. 

II 

We have seen that the present movement in the coun- 
tryside is a movement for the emancipation of the peas- 
ants, we have also seen that to emancipate the peasants 
it is necessary to abolish the remnants oi serfdom, and to 
abolish these remnants it is necessary to confiscate all 
landlord and government land, so as to clear the road for 
the new way of life, for the free development of capitalism. 

Let us assume that all this has been done. How 
should this land be subsequently distributed? Into 
whose ownership should it be transferred? 

Some say that the confiscated land should be granted 
to each village as common property; that the private 



THE AGRARIAN QUESTION 221 

ownership of land must be abolished forthwith, that each 
village should become complete owner of the land and 
then itself divide the land among the peasants in equal 
"allotments," and in this way socialism will be intro- 
duced in the countryside forthwith — instead of wage- 
labour there will be equal land tenure. 

This is called "socialisation of the land," the Socialist- 
Revolutionaries tell us. 

Is this solution acceptable for us? Let us examine 
it. Let us first deal with the point that in introducing 
socialism, the Socialist-Revolutionaries want to begin 
with the countryside. Is this possible? Everybody knows 
that the town is more developed than the countryside, 
that the town is the leader of the countryside, and, con- 
sequently, every activity for socialism must begin in the 
town. The Socialist-Revolutionaries, however, want to 
convert the countryside into the leader of the town and to 
compel the countryside to begin introducing socialism, 
which of course is impossible owing to the backwardness 
of the countryside. Hence, it is obvious that the "social- 
ism" of the Socialist-Revolutionaries will be stillborn 
socialism. 

Let us now pass to the point that they want to intro- 
duce socialism in the countryside forthwith. Introduc- 
ing socialism means abolishing commodity production, 
abolishing the money system, razing capitalism to its 
foundations and socialising all the means of production. 
The Socialist-Revolutionaries, however, want to leave 
all this intact and to socialise only the land, which is 
absolutely impossible. If commodity production remains 
intact, the land, too, will become a commodity and will 
come on to the market any day, and the "socialism" of 



222 J. V. STALIN 



the Socialist-Revolutionaries will be blown sky-high. 
Clearly, they want to introduce socialism within the 
framework of capitalism, which, of course, is incon- 
ceivable. That is exactly why it is said that the "so- 
cialism" of the Socialist-Revolutionaries is bourgeois 
socialism. 

As regards equal land tenure, it must be said that 
this is merely an empty phrase. Equal land tenure needs 
equality of property, but among the peasantry inequality 
of property prevails, and this the present democratic 
revolution cannot abolish. Is it conceivable that the 
owner of eight pair of oxen will make the same use of 
the land as one who owns no oxen at all? And yet the 
Socialist-Revolutionaries believe that "equal land tenure" 
will lead to the abolition of wage-labour, and that it 
will stop the development of capital, which, of course, 
is absurd. Evidently, the Socialist-Revolutionaries want 
to combat the further development of capitalism and 
turn back the wheel of history — in this they seek salva- 
tion. Science, however, tells us that the victory of social- 
ism depends upon the development of capitalism, and 
whoever combats this development is combating social- 
ism. That is why the Socialist-Revolutionaries are also 
called Socialist-Reactionaries. 

We shall not dwell on the fact that the peasants want 
to fight to abolish feudal property not in opposition to 
bourgeois property, but on the basis of bourgeois proper- 
ty — they want to divide the confiscated land among them- 
selves as private property and will not be satisfied with 
"socialisation of the land." 

Hence you see that "socialisation of the land" is 
unacceptable. 



THE AGRARIAN QUESTION 223 

Others say that the confiscated land should be trans- 
ferred to a democratic state, and that the peasants should 
be only the tenants of this state. 

This is called ''nationalisation of the land.'" 

Is the nationalisation of the land acceptable? If 
we bear in mind that the future state, however democratic 
it may be, will nevertheless be a bourgeois state, that 
the transfer of the land to such a state will enhance the 
political strength of the bourgeoisie, which would 
be greatly to the disadvantage of the rural and urban 
proletariat; if we also bear in mind that the peasants 
themselves will be opposed to "nationalisation of the 
land" and will not be satisfied with being merely ten- 
ants — it will be self-evident that "nationalisation of 
the land" is not in the interest of the present-day move- 
ment. 

Consequently, "nationalisation of the land" is also 
unacceptable. 

Still others say that the land should be transferred 
to local government bodies, and that the peasants should 
be the tenants of these bodies. 

This is called "municipalisation of the land.'' 

Is the municipalisation of the land acceptable? What 
does "municipalisation of the land" mean? It means, first- 
ly, that the peasants will not receive as their property the 
land which they confiscate from the landlords and the 
government in the course of the struggle. How will the 
peasants look upon this? The peasants want to receive 
land as their property; the peasants want to divide the 
confiscated land among themselves; they dream of this 
land as their property, and when they are told that this 
land is to be transferred not to them but to the local 



224 J. V. STALIN 



government bodies, they will certainly disagree with 
the advocates of "municipalisation." We must not forget 
this. 

Moreover, what will happen if in their revolutionary 
ardour the peasants take possession of all the confiscated 
land and leave nothing for the local government bodies? 
We cannot stand in their way and say: Halt! This land 
must be transferred to the local government bodies and 
not to you, it will be quite enough for you to be tenants! 

Secondly, if we accept the "municipalisation" slogan 
we must at once raise it among the people and at once 
explain to the peasants that the land for which they are 
fighting, which they want to seize, is not to become 
their property, but the property of local government 
bodies. Of course, if the Party enjoys great influence 
among the peasants they may agree with it, but, needless 
to say, the peasants will no longer fight with their pre- 
vious ardour, and this will be extremely harmful for 
the present revolution. If, however, the Party does not 
enjoy great influence among the peasants, the latter will 
desert the Party and turn their backs upon it, and this 
will cause a conflict between the peasants and the Party 
and greatly weaken the forces of the revolution. 

We shall be told: often the wishes of the peasantry 
run counter to the course of development; we cannot 
ignore the course of history and always follow the wishes 
of the peasants — the Party should have its own princi- 
ples. That is gospel truth! The Party must be guided 
by its principles. But the party which rejected all the 
above-mentioned strivings of the peasantry would betray 
its principles. If the peasants' desire to seize the land- 
lords' lands and to divide them among themselves does 



THE AGRARIAN QUESTION 225 

not run counter to the course of history; if, on the con- 
trary, these strivings spring entirely from the present 
democratic revolution, if a real struggle against feudal 
property can be waged only on the basis of bourgeois 
property, and if the strivings of the peasants express 
precisely this trend — then it is self-evident that the 
Party cannot reject these demands of the peasants, for 
refusal to back these demands would mean refusing to 
develop the revolution. On the other hand, if the Party 
has principles, if it does not wish to become a brake 
upon the revolution, it must help the peasants to achieve 
what they are striving for. And what they are striving 
for totally contradicts the "municipalisation of the 
land"! 

As you see, "municipalisation of the land" is also 
unacceptable. 

Ill 

We have seen that neither "socialisation," nor "na- 
tionalisation," nor "municipalisation" can properly meet 
the interests of the present revolution. 

How should the confiscated land be distributed? 
Into whose ownership should it be transferred? 

Clearly, the land which the peasants confiscate should 
be transferred to the peasants to enable them to divide 
this land among themselves. This is how the question 
raised above should be settled. The division of the land 
will call forth the mobilisation of property. The poor 
will sell their land and take the path of proletarianisa- 
tion; the wealthy will acquire additional land and 
proceed to improve their methods of cultivation; the 



226 J. V. STALIN 



rural population will split up into classes; an acute 
class struggle will flare up, and in this way the founda- 
tion for the further development of capitalism will be 
laid. 

As you see, the division of the land follows logi- 
cally from present-day economic development. 

On the other hand, the slogan "The land to the peas- 
ants, only to the peasants and to nobody else'' will encourage 
the peasantry, infuse new strength into them, and help 
the incipient revolutionary movement in the countryside 
to achieve its aim. 

As you see, the course of the present revolution also 
points to the necessity of dividing the land. 

Our opponents say to us accusingly that in that way 
we shall regenerate the petty bourgeoisie, and that this 
radically contradicts the doctrines of Marx. This is what 
Revolutsionnaya Rossiya^^ writes: 

"By helping the peasantry to expropriate the land- 
lords you are unconsciously helping to install petty- 
bourgeois farming on the ruins of the already more 
or less developed forms of capitalist farming. Is this 
not a 'step backwards' from the point of view of 
orthodox Marxism?" (See Revolutsionnaya Rossiya, 
No. 75.) 

I must say that Messieurs the "Critics" have mixed 
up the facts. They have forgotten that landlord farming 
is not capitalist farming, that it is a survival of feudal 
farming, and, consequently, the expropriation of the 
landlords will destroy the remnants of feudal farming 
and not capitalist farming. They have also forgotten 
that from the point of view of Marxism, capitalist farm- 
ing has never followed directly after feudal farming. 



THE AGRARIAN QUESTION 227 

nor can it do so — between them stands petty-bourgeois 
farming, which supersedes feudal farming and subse- 
quently develops into capitalist farming. Karl Marx said 
in Volume III of Capital that historically feudal farming 
was followed by petty-bourgeois farming and that large- 
scale capitalist farming developed only after that — 
there was no direct leap from one to the other, nor 
could there be. And yet these strange "critics" tell us 
that to take away the landlords' lands and to divide them 
up means retrogression from the point of view of Marx- 
ism! Soon they will say to us accusingly that "the 
abolition of serfdom" was also retrogression from the 
point of view of Marxism, because at that time too some 
of the land was "taken away" from the landlords 
and transferred to small owners — the peasants! What 
funny people they are! They do not understand that 
Marxism looks at everything from the historical point 
of view, that from the point of view of Marxism, 
petty-bourgeois farming is progressive compared with 
feudal farming, that, the destruction of feudal farming 
and the introduction of petty-bourgeois farming are 
essential conditions for the development of capital- 
ism, which will subsequently eliminate petty-bourgeois 
farming. . . . 

But let us leave these "critics" in peace. 

The point is that the transfer of the land to the peas- 
ants and the division of these lands will sap the founda- 
tions of the survivals of serfdom, prepare the ground 
for the development of capitalist farming, give a great 
impetus to the revolutionary upsurge, and precisely for 
these reasons those measures are acceptable to the 
Social-Democratic Party. 



228 J. V. STALIN 



Thus, to abolish the remnants of serfdom it is nec- 
essary to confiscate all the land of the landlords, and 
then the peasants must take this land as their property 
and divide it up among themselves in conformity with 
their interests. 

That is the basis on which the Party's agrarian pro- 
gramme must be built. 

We shall be told: All this applies to the peasants, 
but what do you intend to do with the rural proletarians? 
To this we reply that for the peasants we need a democrat- 
ic agrarian programme, but for the rural and urban prole- 
tarians we have a socialist programme, which expresses 
their class interests. Their current interests are provided 
for in the sixteen points of our minimum programme 
dealing with the improvement of conditions of labour 
(see the Party's programme that was adopted at the Sec- 
ond Congress). Meanwhile, the Party's direct socialist 
activities consist in conducting socialist propaganda 
among the rural proletarians, in uniting them in their 
own socialist organisations, and merging them with the 
urban proletarians in a separate political party. The 
Party is in constant touch with this section of the 
peasantry and says to them: In so far as you are bringing 
about a democratic revolution you must maintain con- 
tact with the militant peasants and fight the landlords, 
but in so far as you are marching towards socialism, 
then resolutely unite with the urban proletarians and 
fight relentlessly against every bourgeois, be he peas- 
ant or landlord. Together with the peasants for a demo- 
cratic republic! Together with the workers for social- 
ism! — that is what the Party says to the rural prole- 
tarians. 



THE AGRARIAN QUESTION 229 

The proletarian movement and its socialist programme 
fan the flames of the class struggle in order to abolish 
the whole class system forever; for their part the peasant 
movement and its democratic agrarian programme fan the 
flames of the struggle between the social estates in the 
countryside in order to eradicate the whole social estate 
system. 



P.S. In concluding this article we cannot refrain 
from commenting on a letter we have received from a 
reader who writes us the following: "After all, your first 
article failed to satisfy me. Was not the Party opposed 
to the confiscation of all the land? If it was, why did it 
not say so?" 

No, dear reader, the Party was never opposed to such 
confiscation. Already at the Second Congress, at the 
very congress which adopted the point on the "otrezki" — 
at that congress (in 1903) the Party, through the mouth 
of Plekhanov and Lenin, said that we would back 
the peasants if they demanded the confiscation of all the 
land* Two years later (1905) the two groups in the 
Party, the "Bolsheviks" at the Third Congress, and the 
"Mensheviks" at the First Conference, unanimously 
stated that they would whole-heartedly back the peasants 
on the question of confiscating all the land.** Then the 
newspapers of both Party trends, Iskra and Proletary, as 
well as Novaya Zhizn^'^ and Nachalo,^^ repeatedly called 
upon the peasantry to confiscate all the land. ... As 



* See Minutes of the Second Congress. 
** See Minutes of the Third Congress and "The First Conference." 



230 J. V. STALIN 



you see, from the very outset the Party has stood for the 
confiscation of all the land and, consequently, you have 
no grounds for thinking that the Party has dragged at 
the tail of the peasant movement. The peasant movement 
had not really started yet, the peasants were not yet 
demanding even the "otrezki," but already at its Second 
Congress the Party was speaking about confiscating all 
the land. 

If, nevertheless, you ask us why we did not, in 1903, 
introduce the demand for the confiscation of all the land in 
our programme, we shall answer by putting another ques- 
tion: Why did not the Socialist-Revolutionaries, in 1900, 
introduce in their programme the demand for a democratic 
republic? Were they opposed to this demand?* Why 
did they at that time talk only about nationalisation, 
and why are they now dinning socialisation into our 
ears? Today we say nothing in our minimum programme 
about a seven-hour day, but does that mean that we are 
opposed to this? What is the point then? Only that in 
1903, when the movement had not yet taken root, the 
demand for the confiscation of all the land would merely 
have remained on paper, the still feeble movement would 
not have been able to cope with this demand, and that 
is why the demand for the "otrezki" was more suitable 
for that period. But subsequently, when the movement 
grew and put forward practical questions, the Party 
had to show that the movement could not, and must 
not, stop at the "otrezki"; that the confiscation of all 
the land was necessary. 



* See Our Tasks, published by the League of Socialist-Revo- 
lutionaries, 1900. 



THE AGRARIAN QUESTION 231 

Such are the facts. 

And finally, a few words about Tsnobis PurtselP'^ 
(see No. 3033). This newspaper printed a lot of nonsense 
about "fashions" and "principles," and asserted that at 
one time the Party elevated "otrezki" to a principle. 
From what has been said above the reader can see that 
this is a lie, that the Party publicly recognised the con- 
fiscation of all the land in principle from the very out- 
set. The fact that Tsnobis Purtseli cannot distinguish 
between principles and practical questions need not 
worry us — it will grow up and learn to distinguish be- 
tween them.* 

Elva {The Lightning), Nos. 5, 9 and 10, 
March 17, 22 and 23, 1906 

Signed: J. Besoshvili 
Translated from the Georgian 



* Tsnobis Purtseli "heard" somewhere that the "Russian Social- 
Democrats . . . have adopted a new agrarian programme by 
virtue of which . . . they support the municipalisation of the land." 
I must say that the Russian Social-Democrats have adopted no 
such programme. The adoption of a programme is the function of a 
congress, but no congress has been held yet. Clearly, Tsnobis Pur- 
tseli has been misled by somebody or something. Tsnobis Purtseli 
would do well if it stopped stuffing its readers with rumours. 



CONCERNING THE AGRARIAN QUESTION 



You probably remember the last article on "munici- 
palisation" (see Elva,^^ No. 12). We have no wish to 
discuss all the questions the author touches upon — that 
is neither interesting nor necessary. We wish to touch 
upon only two main questions: Does municipalisa- 
tion contradict the abolition of the remnants of serf- 
dom? And is the division of the land reactionary? This 
is exactly how our comrade presents the question. Evi- 
dently, he imagines that municipalisation, division of 
the land and similar questions are questions oi prin- 
ciple; the Party, however, puts the agrarian question 
on an altogether different basis. 

The point is that Social-Democracy regards neither 
nationalisation, nor municipalisation, nor the division 
of the land as questions of principle, and raises no objec- 
tion on principle to any of them. Read Marx's Manifesto, 
Kautsky's The Agrarian Question, Minutes of the Second 
Congress, and The Agrarian Question in Russia, also by 
Kautsky, and you will see that this is precisely the case. 
The Party regards all these questions from the practical 
point of view, and puts the agrarian question on a prac- 



THE AGRARIAN QUESTION 233 

tical basis: what most fully carries out our principle — 
municipalisation, nationalisation or division of the 
land? 

This is the basis on which the Party puts the ques- 
tion. 

It goes without saying that the principle of the agrar- 
ian programme — the abolition of the remnants of serfdom 
and the free development of the class struggle — remains 
unchanged; only the means of carrying out this principle 
have changed. 

That is how the author should have presented the ques- 
tion, namely: Which is the better means of securing the abo- 
lition of the remnants of serfdom and the development of 
the class struggle — municipalisation, or the division of 
the land? He, however, quite unexpectedly steps into the 
sphere of principles, palms oif practical questions as ques- 
tions of principle, and asks us: Does so-called municipali- 
sation "contradict the abolition of the remnants of serfdom 
and the development of capitalism"? Neither national- 
isation nor the division of the land contradicts the abo- 
lition of the remnants of serfdom and the development 
of capitalism; but that does not mean that there is no 
difference between them, that the advocate of munici- 
palisation should at the same time advocate nationali- 
sation and the division of the land! Clearly, there is 
some practical difference between them. That is the whole 
point, and that is why the Party puts the question on a 
practical basis. The author, however, as we noted above, 
carried the question to an entirely different plane, con- 
fused the principle with the means of carrying out this 
principle, and thus, involuntarily, evaded the question 
that is raised by the Party. 



234 J. V. STALIN 



The author further assures us that the division of 
the land is reactionary, i.e., he hurls at us the same 
reproach that we have heard more than once from the 
Socialist-Revolutionaries. When those metaphysicians, 
the Socialist-Revolutionaries, tell us that the division 
of the land is reactionary from the standpoint of Marxism, 
this reproach does not surprise us in the least, for we 
know perfectly well that they do not look at the ques- 
tion from the standpoint of dialectics; they refuse to 
understand that everything has its time and place, that 
something which may be reactionary tomorrow may 
be revolutionary today. But when dialectical-material- 
ists hurl that reproach at us we cannot help asking: 
What, then, is the difference between dialecticians and 
metaphysicians? It goes without saying that the 
division of the land would be reactionary if it were 
directed against the development of capitalism; but if it 
is directed against the remnants of serfdom, it is self- 
evident that the division of the land is a revolutionary 
measure which Social-Democracy must support. What 
is the division of the land directed against today: 
against capitalism or against the remnants of serfdom? 
There can be no doubt that it is directed against the 
remnants of serfdom. Hence, the question settles 
itself. 

True, after capitalism has sufficiently established 
itself in the countryside, division of the land will 
become a reactionary measure, for it will then be directed 
against the development of capitalism. Then, Social- 
Democracy will not support it. At the present time Social- 
Democracy strongly champions the demand for a demo- 
cratic republic as a revolutionary measure, but later on. 



THE AGRARIAN QUESTION 235 

when the dictatorship of the proletariat becomes a 
practical question, the democratic republic will already 
be reactionary, and Social-Democracy will strive to 
destroy it. The same thing must be said about the divi- 
sion of the land. Division of the land, and petty-bourgeois 
farming generally, is revolutionary when a struggle is 
being waged against the remnants of serfdom; but the 
same division of the land is reactionary when it is directed 
against the development of capitalism. Such is the dia- 
lectical view of social development. Karl Marx regards 
petty-bourgeois farming in the same dialectical way 
when in Volume III of Capital he calls it progressive 
compared with feudal economy. 

In addition to all this, K. Kautsky says the following 
about the division of the land: 

"The division of the land reserve, i.e., the large 
estates, which the Russian peasants are demanding and 
are already beginning to carry out in practice ... is 
not only inevitable and necessary, but also highly bene- 
ficial. And Social-Democracy has every ground for sup- 
porting this process"" (see The Agrarian Question in Rus- 
sia, p. 11). 

Of enormous importance for the settlement of a 
question is the correct method of presenting it. Every 
question must be presented dialectically, i.e., we must 
never forget that everything changes, that everything 
has its time and place, and, consequently, we must also 
present questions in conformity with concrete circum- 
stances. That is the first condition for the settlement 
of the agrarian question. Secondly, we must also not 
forget that today Russian Social-Democrats put the 
agrarian question on a practical basis, and whoever 



236 J. V. STALIN 



wishes to settle that question must stand on that basis. 
That is the second condition for the settlement of the 
agrarian question. Our comrade, however, took neither 
of these conditions into consideration. 

Well then, the comrade will answer, let us assume 
that the division of the land is revolutionary. Clearly, 
we shall strive to support this revolutionary movement; 
but that does not mean that we ought to introduce the 
demands of this movement into our programme — those 
demands are totally out of place in the programme, etc. 
Evidently the author is confusing the minimum programme 
with the maximum programme. He knows that the so- 
cialist programme (i.e., the maximum programme) should 
contain only proletarian demands; but he forgets that the 
democratic programme (i.e., the minimum programme), 
and the agrarian programme in particular, is not a socialist 
programme, and, consequently, it will certainly contain 
bourgeois-democratic demands, which we support. Political 
freedom is a bourgeois demand; but despite that it oc- 
cupies an honourable place in our minimum programme. 
But why go so far? Take Clause 2 of the agrarian 
programme and read: the Party demands ". . . the abo- 
lition of all laws which restrict the peasant in the disposal 
of his land'' — read all that and answer: what is social- 
istic about this clause? Nothing, you will say, because 
it demands freedom for bourgeois property, and not 
its abolition. Nevertheless, this clause is in our min- 
imum programme. What is the point then? Only that the 
maximum programme and the minimum programme are 
two different concepts, which must not be confused. True, 
the Anarchists will be displeased with that; but we 
cannot help it. We are not Anarchists! . . . 



THE AGRARIAN QUESTION 237 

As regards the peasants' striving for the division 
of the land, we have already said that its importance is 
measured by the trend of economic development; and 
as this striving of the peasants "springs directly" from 
this trend, our Party must support, and not counteract it. 

Elva (The Lightning), No. 14, 
March 29, 1906 

Signed: J. Besoshvili 
Translated from the Georgian 



CONCERNING THE REVISION 
OF THE AGRARIAN PROGRAMME 

{Speech delivered at the Seventh Sitting 

of the Fourth Congress of the R.S.D.L.P.^^ 

April 13 (26), 1906) 



First of all I will speak about the mode of argument 
adopted by certain comrades. Comrade Plekhanov talked 
a lot about Comrade Lenin's "anarchistic propensities," 
about the fatal consequences of "Leninism," and so on, 
and so forth; but he said very little about the agrarian 
question. And yet he is down as one of the speakers 
on the agrarian question. I am of the opinion that this 
mode of argument, which creates an atmosphere of 
irritation, in addition to being out of harmony with the 
character of our congress, which is called a Unity Con- 
gress, tells us absolutely nothing about the presentation 
of the agrarian question. We could talk about Comrade 
Plekhanov's Cadet propensities, but we would not, 
thereby, carry the settlement of the agrarian question 
a single step forward. 

Further, John,*"^ from certain data of the life of 
Guria, the Lettish region, etc., draws an inference in 
favour of municipalisation for the whole of Russia. I 
must say that, speaking generally, that is not the way 
to draw up a programme. In drawing up a programme we 
must take as the starting point not the specific features 
of certain parts of certain border regions, but the features 
common to the majority of localities in Russia. A pro- 



CONCERNING THE REVISION OF THE AGRARIAN PROGRAMME 239 

gramme without a dominating line is not a programme, 
but a mechanical combination of different propositions. 
That is exactly how it stands with John's draft. Moreover, 
John is quoting incorrect data. In his opinion the very 
process of development of the peasant movement speaks 
in favour of his draft because in Guria, for example, in 
the very process of this movement, a regional local 
government body was formed which took control of the 
forests, etc. But first of all, Guria is not a region, but 
one of the uyezds in the Kutais Gubernia; secondly, 
there has never been in Guria a revolutionary local 
government body covering the whole of Guria; there have 
been only small local government bodies, which are not 
the same thing as a regional local government body; 
thirdly, control is one thing — ownership is quite another. 
Speaking generally, lots of legends are afloat concerning 
Guria, and the Russian comrades are quite mistaken 
in taking them for the truth. . . . 

As regards the essence of the subject, I must say that 
the following proposition should serve as the starting 
point for our programme: since we are concluding a tem- 
porary revolutionary alliance with the militant peasantry, 
and therefore, since we cannot ignore the demands of 
this peasantry — we must support these demands if, on 
the whole, they do not run counter to the trend of eco- 
nomic development and the course of the revolution. 
The peasants are demanding division; division does not 
run counter to the phenomena I have mentioned; hence, 
we must support complete confiscation and division. 
From this point of view both nationalisation and 
municipalisation are equally unacceptable. By advancing 
the slogan of municipalisation, or of nationalisation, we 



240 J. V. STALIN 



gain nothing and make the alliance between the revolu- 
tionary peasantry and the proletariat impossible. Those 
who say that division is reactionary confuse two stages 
of development: the capitalist and the pre-capitalist 
stages. Undoubtedly, in the capitalist stage, division 
is reactionary; but under pre-capitalist conditions (under 
the conditions prevailing in the Russian countryside, 
for example), division, on the whole, is revolutionary. 
Of course, forests, waters, etc., cannot be divided, but 
these can be nationalised, and that does not run counter 
to the revolutionary demands put forward by the peas- 
ants. Furthermore, the slogan: Revolutionary Commit- 
tees — which John proposes instead of Revolutionary 
Peasant Committees — fundamentally contradicts the 
spirit of the agrarian revolution. The object of the agrar- 
ian revolution is primarily and mainly to emancipate 
the peasants; consequently, the slogan. Peasant Commit- 
tees, is the only slogan that corresponds to the spirit 
of the agrarian revolution. If the emancipation of the 
proletariat must be the act of the proletariat itself, then 
the emancipation of the peasants must be the act of the 
peasants themselves. 

Minutes of the Unity Congress 
of the Russian Social-Democratic 
Labour Party held in Stockholm 
in 1906 

Moscow 1907, pp. 59-60 



ON THE PRESENT SITUATION 

(Speech delivered at the Fifteenth Sitting 

of the Fourth Congress of the R.S.D.L.P. 

April 17 (30), 1906) 



It is no secret to anyone that two paths are now 
discernible in the development of the social and political 
life of Russia: the path of pseudo-reform and the path 
of revolution. It is clear also that the big factory own- 
ers and the landlords, headed by the tsarist government, 
are taking the first path, while the revolutionary peas- 
antry and the petty bourgeoisie, headed by the prole- 
tariat, are taking the second. The crisis that is developing 
in the towns and the famine in the countryside are making 
another upheaval inevitable — consequently, here vacil- 
lation is impermissible. Either the revolution is on the 
upgrade — and in that case we must carry the revolution 
through to the end — or it is on the downgrade, in which 
case we cannot and should not set ourselves such a task. 
Rudenko is wrong in thinking that this method of present- 
ing the question is not dialectical. Rudenko is looking for 
a middle course; he wants to say that the revolution is 
and is not on the upgrade, and that it should and should not 
be carried to the end, because, in his opinion, dialectics 
makes it incumbent to present the question in this way! 
That is not our conception of Marxian dialectics. . . . 
And so we are on the eve of another upheaval; the 
revolution is on the upgrade and we must carry it to the 



242 J. V. STALIN 



end. On this we are all agreed. But under what circum- 
stances can we, and should we, do this? Under the hegem- 
ony of the proletariat, or under the hegemony of bour- 
geois democracy? This is where our main disagreement 
begins. 

Comrade Martynov has said already in his Two 
Dictatorships that the hegemony of the proletariat in 
the present bourgeois revolution is a harmful Utopia. 
The same idea ran through the speech he delivered yester- 
day. The Comrades who applauded him evidently agree 
with him. If that is the case, if in the opinion of the 
Menshevik comrades what we need is not the hegemony 
of the proletariat, but the hegemony of the democratic 
bourgeoisie, then it is self-evident that we should take 
no direct active part either in the organisation of an 
armed uprising, or in the seizure of power. Such is the 
"scheme" of the Mensheviks. 

On the other hand, if the class interests of the pro- 
letariat lead to its hegemony, if the proletariat must be 
at the head of the present revolution and not drag at its 
tail, it goes without saying that the proletariat cannot 
refrain either from taking an active part in the organi- 
sation of an armed uprising or from seizing power. Such 
is the "scheme" of the Bolsheviks. 

Either the hegemony of the proletariat, or the hegem- 
ony of the democratic bourgeoisie — that is how the 
question stands in the Party, that is where we differ. 

Minutes of the Unity Congress 
of the Russian Social-Democratic 
Labour Party held in Stockholm 
in 1906 



Moscow 1907, p. 187 



MARX AND ENGELS ON INSURRECTION 



The Menshevik N. H.^^ knows that audacity wins 
the day and . . . has the audacity to accuse the Bolshe- 
viks once again of being Blanquists (see Simartleh,'''^ 
No. 7). 

There is nothing surprising in this, of course. Bern- 
stein and Vollmar, the German opportunists, have for 
a long time been saying that Kautsky and Bebel are 
Blanquists. Jaures and Millerand, the French opportu- 
nists, have been for a long time accusing Guesde and 
Lafargue of being Blanquists and Jacobins. Nevertheless, 
everyone knows that Bernstein, Millerand, Jaures and 
the others, are opportunists, that they are betraying 
Marxism, whereas Kautsky, Bebel, Guesde, Lafargue 
and the others are revolutionary Marxists. What is there 
surprising in the fact that the Russian opportunists, 
and their follower N. H., copy the European opportu- 
nists and call us Blanquists? It shows only that the Bol- 
sheviks, like Kautsky and Guesde, are revolutionary 
Marxists.''^ 

We could here conclude our talk with N. H., but he 
makes the question "more profound" and tries to prove 
his point. Very well, let us not offend him and hear 
what he has to say. 



244 J. V. STALIN 



N. H. disagrees with the following opinion expressed 
by the Bolsheviks: 

"Let us suppose that* the people in the towns are 
imbued with hatred for the government**; they can 
always rise up for the struggle if the opportunity offers. 
That means that quantitatively we are ready. But this 
is not enough. If an uprising is to be successful, it is 
necessary to draw up in advance a plan of the struggle, 
to draw up in advance the tactics of the battle; it is nec- 
essary to have organised detachments, and so forth" 
(see Akhali Tskhovreba, No. 6) 

N. H. disagrees with this. Why? Because, he says, 
it is Blanquism! And so, N. H. wants neither "tactics 
of the battle," nor "organised detachments," nor organ- 
ised action — all that, it appears, is unimportant and 
unnecessary. The Bolsheviks say that by itself "hatred 
for the government is not enough," consciousness by 
itself "is not enough"; it is necessary to have, in ad- 
dition, "detachments and tactics of the battle." N. H. re- 
jects all that and calls it Blanquism. 

Let us note this and proceed. 

N. H. dislikes the following idea expressed by Lenin: 

We must collect the experience of the uprisings 
in Moscow, the Donets Basin, Rostov-on-Don and other 
places, disseminate this experience, perseveringly and 
painstakingly prepare new fighting forces and train and 
steel them in a series of militant guerilla actions. The 



* Here N. H. substituted the word "when" for the words 
"let us suppose that," which slightly alters the meaning. 

** Here N. H. omitted the words "for the government" (see 
Akhali Tskhovreba,^^ No. 6). 



MARX AND ENGELS ON INSURRECTION 245 

new upheaval may not yet break out in the spring, but 
it is approaching; in all probability it is not very far 
off. We must meet it armed, organised in military 
fashion, and be capable of taking determined offensive 
action" (see Partiiniye Izvestia).^'' 

N. H. disagrees with this idea of Lenin's. Why? 
Because, he says, it is Blanquism! 

And so, in N. H.'s opinion, we must not "collect the 
experience of the December uprising" and must not 
"disseminate it." True, an upheaval is approaching, 
but in N. H.'s opinion we must not "meet it armed," we 
must not prepare "for determined offensive action." Why? 
Probably because we are more likely to be victorious 
if we are unarmed and unprepared! The Bolsheviks say 
that we can expect an upheaval and, therefore, our duty 
is to prepare for it both in respect to consciousness and 
in respect to arms. N. H. knows that an upheaval is to 
be expected, but he refuses to recognise anything more 
than verbal agitation and therefore doubts whether it 
is necessary to arm, and thinks it superfluous. The Bol- 
sheviks say that consciousness and organisation must 
be introduced into the sporadic insurrection which has 
broken out spontaneously. But N. H. refuses to recognise 
this — it is Blanquism, he says. The Bolsheviks say that 
at a definite moment "determined offensive action" must 
be taken. But N. H. dislikes both determination and 
offensive action — all this is Blanquism, he says. 

Let us note the foregoing and see what attitude Marx 
and Engels took towards armed insurrection. 

Here is what Marx wrote in the fifties: 

". . . The insurrectionary career once entered upon, 
act with the greatest determination, and on the offensive. 



246 J. V. STALIN 



The defensive is the death of every armed rising. . . . 
Surprise your antagonists while their forces are scattering, 
prepare new successes, however small, but daily 
keep up the moral ascendant which the first successful 
rising has given to you; rally thus those vacillating 
elements to your side which always follow the strongest 
impulse and which always look out for the safer side; 
force your enemies to a retreat before they can collect 
their strength against you; in the words of Danton, the 
greatest master of revolutionary policy yet known: de 
I'audace, de I'audace, encore de VaudaceT (See Karl 
Marx, Historical Sketches, p. 95.)''** 

This is what Karl Marx, the greatest of Marxists, 
says. 

As you see, in Marx's opinion, whoever wants 
insurrection to triumph must take the path of the 
offensive. But we know that whoever takes the path 
of the offensive must have arms, military knowledge 
and trained detachments. Without these an offensive 
is impossible. Bold offensive action, in Marx's 
opinion, is the flesh and blood of every uprising. 
N. H., however, ridicules everything: bold offensive 
action, the policy of offensive, organised detachments 
and the dissemination of military knowledge. All that is 
Blanquism, he says! It appears, then, that N. H. is 
a Marxist, but Marx is a Blanquist! Poor Marx! If 
only he could rise from his grave and hear N. H.'s 
prattle. 

And what does Engels say about insurrection? In 
a passage in one of his pamphlets he refers to the Span- 
ish uprising, and answering the Anarchists, he goes 
on to say: 



MARX AND ENGELS ON INSURRECTION 247 

"Nevertheless, the uprising, even if begun in a brain- 
less way, would have had a good chance to succeed, if 
it had only been conducted with some intelligence, say 
in the manner of Spanish military revolts, in which the 
garrison of one town rises, marches on to the next, sweeps 
along with it that town's garrison that had been influ- 
enced beforehand and, growing into an avalanche, 
presses on to the capital, until a fortunate engagement 
or the coming over to their side of the troops sent against 
them decides the victory. This method was particularly 
practicable on that occasion. The insurgents had long 
before been organised everywhere into volunteer battalions 
(do you hear, comrade, Engels talks about battalions!) 
whose discipline, while wretched, was surely not more 
wretched than that of the remnants of the old, and in the 
main disintegrated, Spanish army. The only dependable 
government troops were the gendarmes {guardias civiles), 
and these were scattered all over the country. It 
was primarily a question of preventing a concentra- 
tion of the gendarme detachments, and this could be 
brought about only by assuming the offensive and the 
hazard of open battle . . . (attention, comrades, atten- 
tion!). For any one who sought victory, there was no 
other means. . . ." Engels then goes on to take to task 
the Bakuninists, who proclaimed as their principle 
that which could have been avoided: "the splitting up 
and isolation of the revolutionary forces, which per- 
mitted the same government troops to quell one upris- 
ing after another" (see Engels's The Bakuninists at 
Work)}"" 

This is what the celebrated Marxist, Frederick Engels, 
says. . . . 



248 J. V. STALIN 



Organised battalions, the policy of offensive, organs- 
ing insurrection, uniting the separate insurrection — 
that, in Engels's opinion, is needed to ensure the victory 
of an insurrection. 

It appears then that N. H. is a Marxist, but Engels 
is a Blanquist! Poor Engels! 

As you see, N. H. is not familiar with the views of 
Marx and Engels on insurrection. 

That would not be so bad. We declare that the tac- 
tics advocated by N. H. belittle and actually deny the 
importance of arming, of Red detachments, and of mili- 
tary knowledge. His are the tactics of unarmed insur- 
rection. His tactics push us towards the "December 
defeat." Why did we have no arms, no detachments, 
no military knowledge and so forth in December? Because 
the tactics advocated by comrades like N. H. were widely 
accepted in the Party. . . . 

But both Marxism and real life reject such un- 
armed tactics. 

That is what the facts say. 

Akhali Tskhovreba 
{New Life), No. 19, 
July 13, 1906 



Signed: Koba 

Translated from the Georgian 



INTERNATIONAL COUNTER-REVOLUTION 



In many ways, present-day Russia reminds us of 
France in the period of the great revolution. This simi- 
larity finds expression, among other things, in that in 
our country, as in France, counter-revolution is spread- 
ing and, overflowing its own frontiers, is entering into 
an alliance with counter-revolution in other countries — 
it is gradually assuming an international character. 
In France, the old government concluded an alliance 
with the Austrian Emperor and the King of Prussia, 
called their troops to its aid, and launched an offensive 
against the people's revolution. In Russia, the old govern- 
ment is concluding an alliance with the German and 
Austrian emperors — it wants to call their troops to its 
aid and to drown the people's revolution in blood. 

Only a month ago definite rumours were afloat to 
the effect that "Russia" and "Germany" were conduct- 
ing secret negotiations (see Severnaya Zemlya,''^ No. 3). 
Later these rumours spread more persistently. And 
now things have reached such a pitch that the Black- 
Hundred newspaper Rossiya^^ openly states that the 
blame for "Russia's" (i.e., the counter-revolution's) 
present difficulties rests upon the revolutionary elements. 
"The Imperial German government," says that newspa- 
per, "is fully aware of this situation and has therefore 
undertaken a series of appropriate measures which 



250 J. V. STALIN 



will certainly lead to the desired results." It transpires 
that these measures amount to preparations by "Austria" 
and "Germany" to send troops to assist "Russia" in the 
event of the Russian revolution proving successful. 
They have already reached agreement on that point, 
and have decided that "under certain conditions active 
intervention in the internal affairs of Russia with the 
object of suppressing, or curbing, the revolutionary move- 
ment may be desirable and beneficial. . . ." 

So says Rossiya. 

As you see, international counter-revolution has long 
been making extensive preparations. It is well known 
that for a long time past it has been rendering counter- 
revolutionary Russia financial assistance in the struggle 
against the revolution. But it has not confined itself to 
this. Now, it appears, it has decided to come to the aid of 
counter-revolutionary Russia also with troops. 

After that, even a child can easily understand the 
real significance of the dissolution of the Duma, as well 
as the significance of Stolypin's "new" orders^^ and 
Trepov's "old" pogroms.'^ ... It must be assumed that 
now the false hopes entertained by various liberals 
and other naive people will be dispelled, and that they 
will at last become convinced that we have no "con- 
stitution," that we have civil war, and that the struggle 
must be waged on military lines. . . . 

But present-day Russia resembles France of that time 
also in another respect. At that time, international 
counter-revolution caused an expansion of the revolu- 
tion; the revolution overflowed the borders of France and 
swept through Europe in a mighty flood. The "crowned 
heads" of Europe united in a common alliance, but 



INTERNATIONAL COUNTER-REVOLUTION 251 

the peoples of Europe also extended their hands to 
one another. We see the same thing in Russia today. 
"The old mole is grubbing well." . . . By uniting with 
the European counter-revolution the Russian counter- 
revolution is steadily expanding the revolution, unit- 
ing the proletarians of all countries, and laying the 
foundations for the international revolution. The Rus- 
sian proletariat is marching at the head of the democrat- 
ic revolution and is extending a fraternal hand to, is 
uniting with, the European proletariat, which will 
begin the socialist revolution. As is well known, after 
the January 9 action, mass meetings were held all over 
Europe. The December action evoked demonstrations 
in Germany and France. There can be no doubt that the 
impending action of the Russian revolution will still 
more vigorously rouse the European proletariat for the 
struggle. International counter-revolution will only 
strengthen and deepen, intensify and firmly establish, 
international revolution. The slogan "Workers of all 
countries, unite!" will find its true expression. 

So go on, gentlemen, keep it up! The Russian revo- 
lution, which is expanding, will be followed by the 
European revolution — and then . . . and then the last 
hour will strike not only for the survivals of serfdom, 
but also for your beloved capitalism. 

Yes, you are "grubbing well," Messieurs counter- 
revolutionaries. 

Akhali Tskhovreha 

{New Life), No. 20, 

July 14, 1906 

Signed: Koba 

Translated from the Georgian 



THE PRESENT SITUATION AND THE UNITY 
CONGRESS OF THE WORKERS' PARTY^^ 



I 

What we have been waiting for so impatiently has 
come to pass — the Unity Congress has ended peacefully, 
the Party has avoided a split, the amalgamation of the 
groups has been officially sealed, and the foundation of 
the political might of the Party has thereby been laid. 

We must now take account of, and study more close- 
ly, the complexion of the congress and soberly weigh 
up its good and bad sides. 

What has the congress done? 

What should the congress have done? 

The first question is answered by the resolutions of 
the congress. To be able to answer the second question 
one must know the situation in which the congress was 
opened, and the tasks with which the present situation 
confronted it. 

Let us start with the second question. 

It is now clear that the people's revolution has not 
perished, that in spite of the "December defeat" it is 
growing and swiftly rising to its peak. We say that this 
is as it should be: the driving forces of the revolution 
still live and operate, the industrial crisis which 



PRESENT SITUATION AND UNITY CONGRESS OF WORKERS' PARTY 253 

has broken out is becoming increasingly acute, and 
famine, which is utterly ruining the countryside, 
is growing worse every day — and this means that the 
hour is near when the revolutionary anger of the people 
will burst out in a menacing flood. The facts tell us 
that a new action is maturing in the social life of Rus- 
sia — more determined and mighty than the December 
action. We are on the eve of an uprising. 

On the other hand, the counter-revolution, which the 
people detest, is mustering its forces and is gradually 
gaining strength. It has already succeeded in organising 
a camarilla, it is rallying all the dark forces under its 
banner, it is taking the lead of the Black-Hundred "move- 
ment"; it is preparing to launch another attack upon 
the people's revolution; it is rallying around itself the 
bloodthirsty landlords and factory owners — consequently, 
it is preparing to crush the people's revolution. 

And the more events develop, the more sharply is 
the country becoming divided into two hostile camps — 
the camp of the revolution and the camp of counter-rev- 
olution — the more threateningly do the two leaders of the 
two camps — the proletariat and the tsarist government — 
confront each other, and the clearer does it become that all 
the bridges between them have been burnt. One of two 
things: either the victory of the revolution and the sover- 
eignty of the people, or the victory of the counter-revo- 
lution and the tsarist autocracy. Whoever tries to sit be- 
tween two stools betrays the revolution. Those who are not 
for us are against us! That is exactly what has happened to 
the miserable Duma and its miserable Cadets: they have 
become stuck between these two stools. The Duma wants to 
reconcile the revolution with the counter-revolution, it 



254 J. V. STALIN 



wants the lion and the lamb to lie down together — and in 
that way to suppress the revolution "at one stroke." That 
is why the Duma is engaged to this day only in collecting 
water with a sieve, that is why it has failed to rally any 
people around itself. Having no ground to stand on, it is 
dangling in the air. 

The chief arena of the struggle is still the street. 
That is what the facts say. The facts say that it is in 
the present-day struggle, in street fighting, and not in 
that talking-shop the Duma, that the forces of the coun- 
ter-revolution are daily becoming more feeble and dis- 
united, whereas the forces of the revolution are growing 
and mobilising; that the revolutionary forces are being 
welded and organised under the leadership of the ad- 
vanced workers and not of the bourgeoisie. And this 
means that the victory of the present revolution, and 
its consummation, is quite possible. But it is possible 
only if it continues to be led by the advanced workers, 
if the class-conscious proletariat worthily fulfils the 
task of leading the revolution. 

Hence, the tasks with which the present situation 
confronted the congress, and what the congress should 
have done, are clear. 

Engels said that the workers' party "is the con- 
scious exponent of an unconscious process," i.e., that 
the party must consciously take the path along which 
life itself is proceeding unconsciously; that it must con- 
sciously express the ideas which unconsciously spring 
from tempestuous life. 

The facts say that tsarism has failed to crush the 
people's revolution, that, on the contrary, it is grow- 
ing day by day, rising higher, and marching towards 



PRESENT SITUATION AND UNITY CONGRESS OF WORKERS' PARTY 255 

another action. Consequently, it is the Party's task 
consciously to prepare for this action and to carry the 
people's revolution through to the end. 

Clearly, the congress should have pointed to this 
task and should have made it incumbent upon the mem- 
bers of the Party honestly to carry it out. 

The facts say that conciliation between the revo- 
lution and counter-revolution is impossible; that having 
taken the path of conciliation from the very outset the 
Duma can do nothing; that such a Duma can never be- 
come the political centre of the country, cannot rally 
the people around itself, and will be compelled to become 
an appendage of the reaction. Consequently, it is the 
Party's task to dispel the false hopes that have been 
reposed in the Duma, to combat political illusions among 
the people and to proclaim to the whole world that the 
chief arena of the revolution is the street and not the 
Duma; that the victory of the people must be achieved 
mainly in the street, by street fighting and not by the 
Duma, not by talking in the Duma. 

Clearly, the Unity Congress should also have pointed 
to this task in its resolutions, in order thereby clearly to 
define the trend of the Party's activities. 

The facts say that it is possible to achieve the victory 
of the revolution, to carry it to the end and to establish 
the sovereignty of the people, only if the class-conscious 
workers come out at the head of the revolution, if the 
revolution is led by Social-Democracy and not by the 
bourgeoisie. Hence it is the Party's task to dig the grave 
of the hegemony of the bourgeoisie, to rally the revolu- 
tionary elements of town and country around itself, 
I to be at the head of their revolutionary struggle, to 



256 J. V. STALIN 



lead their actions from now on, and thereby strengthen 
the ground for the hegemony of the proletariat. 

Clearly, the Unity Congress should have drawn spe- 
cial attention to this third and main task in order 
thereby to indicate to the Party its enormous importance. 

That is what the present situation demanded of 
the Unity Congress, and that is what the congress should 
have done. 

Did the congress carry out these tasks? 

II 

To obtain an answer to the foregoing question it is 
necessary to study the complexion of the congress. 

The congress dealt with numerous questions at its 
sittings; but the main question, around which all the 
other questions revolved, was the question of the present 
situation. The present situation in the democratic revolu- 
tion and the class tasks of the proletariat — that is the 
question in which all our disagreements on tactics be- 
came entangled as in a knot. 

In the towns the crisis is growing more acute, said 
the Bolsheviks; in the countryside the famine is grow- 
ing more intense; the government is rotting to its founda- 
tion, the anger of the people is rising day by day. 
Consequently, far from subsiding, the revolution is grow- 
ing day by day, and is preparing for another offensive. 
Hence, the task is to help on the growing revolution, to 
carry it to the end and crown it with the sovereignty of 
the people (see the resolution proposed by the Bolsheviks: 
"The Present Situation . . ."). 

The Mensheviks said almost the same thing. 



PRESENT SITUATION AND UNITY CONGRESS OF WORKERS' PARTY 257 

But how is the present revolution to be carried to 
the end; what conditions are needed for this? 

In the opinion of the Bolsheviks, the present revo- 
lution can be carried to the end and crowned with the sover- 
eignty of the people only //"the class-conscious workers are 
at the head of this revolution, only if the leadership of 
the revolution is concentrated in the hands of the social- 
ist proletariat and not of the bourgeois democrats. The 
Bolsheviks said: "Only the proletariat is capable of 
carrying the democratic revolution to the end, provided 
however, that it . . . carries with it the masses of the 
peasantry and introduces political consciousness into 
their spontaneous struggle. . . ." If the proletariat fails 
to do this, it will be compelled to abandon the role of 
"leader of the people's revolution" and will find itself 
"at the tail of the liberal-monarchist bourgeoisie," 
which will never strive to carry the revolution to the 
end (see resolution "The Class Tasks of the Proletar- 
iat . . ."). Of course, our revolution is a bourgeois revo- 
lution, and in this respect it resembles the Great French 
Revolution, the fruits of which were reaped by the bour- 
geoisie. But it is also clear that there is a great difference 
between these two revolutions. At the time of the French 
revolution, large-scale machine production, such as we 
have in our country today, did not exist, and class antag- 
onisms were not so sharp and distinct as they are in 
our country today; hence, the proletariat there was 
weak, whereas here it is stronger and more united. We 
must also take into account the fact that there the pro- 
letariat did not have its own party, whereas here it has its 
own party, with its own programme and tactics. It is not 
surprising that the French revolution was headed by the 



258 J. V. STALIN 



bourgeois democrats and that the workers dragged at 
the tail of these gentlemen; that "the workers did the 
fighting, while the bourgeoisie achieved power." On the 
other hand, it can be readily understood that the pro- 
letariat of Russia is not content with dragging at the 
tail of the liberals, that it comes out as the leader of 
the revolution and is rallying all the "oppressed and 
dispossessed" to its banner. This is where our revolution 
has the advantage over the Great French Revolution, 
and this is why we think that our revolution can be car- 
ried to the end and be crowned with the sovereignty of the 
people. All that is needed is that we should consciously 
further the hegemony of the proletariat, rally the mil- 
itant people around it, and thereby make it possible 
for the present revolution to be carried to the end. But 
the revolution must be carried to the end in order that 
the fruits of this revolution shall not be reaped by the 
bourgeoisie alone, and in order that the working class, 
in addition to achieving political freedom, shall achieve 
the eight-hour day, and better conditions of labour, 
and shall fully carry out its minimum programme, there- 
by hewing a path to socialism. Hence, whoever cham- 
pions the interests of the proletariat, whoever does not 
want the proletariat to become a hanger-on of the 
bourgeoisie, pulling the chestnuts out of the fire for 
it, whoever is fighting to convert the proletariat into 
an independent force and wants it to utilise the 
present revolution for its own purpose — must openly 
condemn the hegemony of the bourgeois democrats, 
must strengthen the ground for the hegemony of the 
socialist proletariat in the present revolution. 
That is how the Bolsheviks argued. 



PRESENT SITUATION AND UNITY CONGRESS OF WORKERS' PARTY 259 

The Mensheviks said something entirely different. 
Of course, the revolution is growing, they said, and it 
must be carried to the end, but the hegemony of the social- 
ist proletariat is not at all needed for that — let the 
bourgeois democrats act as the leaders of the revolution 
Why? What is the point? the Bolsheviks asked. Because 
the present revolution is a bourgeois revolution, and 
therefore, the bourgeoisie should act as its leader — 
answered the Mensheviks. What is the function of the 
proletariat, then? It must follow in the wake of the 
bourgeois democrats, "prod them on," and thereby "push 
the bourgeois revolution forward." This was said by 
Martynov, the leader of the Mensheviks, whom they put 
up as their "reporter." The same idea was expressed, al- 
though not so distinctly, in the Mensheviks' resolution on 
"The Present Situation." But already in his Two Dicta- 
torships Martynov had said that "the hegemony of the 
proletariat is a dangerous Utopia," a fantasy; that the 
bourgeois revolution "must be led by the extreme dem- 
ocratic opposition" and not by the socialist proletar- 
iat; that the militant proletariat "must march behind 
bourgeois democracy" and prod it along the path to 
freedom (see Martynov's well-known pamphlet Two 
Dictatorships). He expressed this idea again at the Unity 
Congress. In his opinion, the Great French Revolution 
was the original, whereas our revolution is a faint copy 
of this original; and, as the revolution in France was 
first headed by the National Assembly and later by 
the National Convention in which the bourgeoisie pre- 
dominated, so, in our country, the leader of the revo- 
lution which rallies the people around itself should be first 
the State Duma, and later some other representative 



260 J. V. STALIN 



body which will be more revolutionary than the 
Duma. Both in the Duma and in this future representa- 
tive body the bourgeois democrats are to predominate — 
hence, we need the hegemony of bourgeois democracy 
and not of the socialist proletariat. All we need to do is 
to follow the bourgeoisie step by step and prod it further 
forward towards genuine freedom. It is characteristic 
that the Mensheviks greeted Martynov's speech with 
loud applause. It is also characteristic that in none of 
their resolutions do they refer to the necessity of the 
hegemony of the proletariat — the term "hegemony of the 
proletariat" has been completely expunged from their 
resolutions, as well as from the resolutions of the con- 
gress (see the resolutions of the congress). 

Such was the stand the Mensheviks took at the con- 
gress. 

As you see, here we have two mutually exclusive 
standpoints, and this is the source of all the other dis- 
agreements. 

If the class-conscious proletariat is the leader of the 
present revolution and the bourgeois Cadets predomi- 
nate in the present Duma, it is self-evident that the 
present Duma cannot become the "political centre of the 
country," it cannot unite the revolutionary people 
around itself and become the leader of the growing rev- 
olution, no matter what efforts it exerts. Further, if 
the class-conscious proletariat is the leader of the revo- 
lution and the revolution cannot be led from the Duma — 
it is self-evident that the street and not the floor of 
the Duma must, at the present time, become the chief 
arena of our activities. Further, if the class-conscious 
proletariat is the leader of the revolution and the street 



PRESENT SITUATION AND UNITY CONGRESS OF WORKERS' PARTY 261 

is the chief arena of the struggle — it is self-evident that 
our task is to take an active part in organising the 
struggle in the street, to give concentrated attention to the 
task of arming, to augment the Red detachments and 
disseminate military knowledge among the advanced 
elements. Lastly, if the advanced proletariat is the lead- 
er of the revolution, and if it must take an active part 
in organising the uprising — then it is self-evident that 
we cannot wash our hands of and remain aloof from 
the provisional revolutionary government; that we must 
conquer political power in conjunction with the peas- 
antry and take part in the provisional government*: 
the leader of the revolutionary street must also be the 
leader in the revolution's government. 

Such was the stand taken by the Bolsheviks. 

If, on the other hand, as the Mensheviks think, the 
bourgeois democrats will lead the revolution, and the 
Cadets in the Duma "approximate to this type of demo- 
crat," then it is self-evident that the present Duma can 
become the "political centre of the country," the pres- 
ent Duma can unite the revolutionary people around 
itself, become their leader and serve as the chief arena of 
the struggle. Further, if the Duma can become the chief 
arena of the struggle, there is no need to give concentrated 
attention to the task of arming and organising Red 
detachments; it is not our business to devote special 
attention to organising the struggle in the street, and 
still less is it our business to conquer political power in 
conjunction with the peasantry and to take part in the 



* We are not dealing here with the principle underlying this 
question. 



262 J. V. STALIN 



provisional government — let the bourgeois democrats 
worry about that for they will be the leaders of the revo- 
lution. Of course, it would not be bad to have arms and 
Red detachments, in fact they are actually necessary, 
but they are not so important as the Bolsheviks imagine. 

Such was the stand taken by the Mensheviks. 

The congress took the second path, i.e., it rejected 
the hegemony of the socialist proletariat and endorsed 
the stand taken by the Mensheviks. 

The congress thereby clearly proved that it failed to 
understand the urgent requirements of the present situa- 
tion. 

This was the fundamental mistake the congress made, 
and from it necessarily followed all the other mistakes. 

Ill 

After the congress rejected the idea of the hegemony 
of the proletariat it became clear how it would settle 
the other questions: "the attitude to be taken towards 
the State Duma," "armed insurrection," etc. 

Let us pass to these questions. 

Let us begin with the question of the State Duma. 

We shall not discuss the question as to which tactics 
were more correct — the boycott or participation in the 
elections. We shall note only the following: today, 
the Duma does nothing but talk; it lies stranded between 
the revolution and counter-revolution. This shows that 
the advocates of participation in the elections were mis- 
taken when they called upon the people to go to the polls 
and thereby roused false hopes among them. But let us 
leave this aside. The point is that at the time the con- 
gress was in session the elections were already over (except 



PRESENT SITUATION AND UNITY CONGRESS OF WORKERS' PARTY 263 

in the Caucasus and in Siberia); we already had the 
returns and, consequently, the only point of discussion 
was the Duma itself, which was to meet within a few 
days. Clearly, the congress could not turn to the past; 
it had to devote its attention mainly to the question 
as to what the Duma was, and what our attitude 
towards it should be. 

And so, what is the present Duma, and what should 
be our attitude towards it? 

It was already known from the Manifesto of October 17 
that the Duma would not have particularly great pow- 
ers: it is an assembly of deputies who "have the right" 
to deliberate, but "have no right" to overstep the exist- 
ing "fundamental laws." The Duma is supervised by 
the State Council, which "has the right" to veto any 
of its decisions. And on guard, armed to the teeth, 
stands the tsarist government, which "has the right" 
to disperse the Duma if it does not rest content with 
its deliberative role. 

As regards the Duma's complexion, we knew before 
the congress what its composition would be; we knew 
that it would consist largely of Cadets. We do not wish 
to say that the Cadets by themselves would have con- 
stituted the majority in the Duma — we only say that 
out of approximately five hundred members of the Duma, 
one third would be Cadets while another third would 
consist of the intermediary groups and the Rights (the 
"Party of Democratic Reform, "^^ the moderate elements 
among the non-party deputies, the Octobrists,^'' etc.) 
who, when it came to clashes with the extreme Lefts 
(the workers' group and the group of revolutionary peas- 
ants) would unite around the Cadets and vote with 



264 J. V. STALIN 



them; consequently, the Cadets would be the masters of 
the situation in the Duma. 

What are the Cadets? Can they be called revolu- 
tionaries? Of course, not! What, then, are the Cadets? 
The Cadets are a party of compromisers: they want to 
restrict the powers of the tsar, but not because they are 
in favour of the victory of the people, as they claim — the 
Cadets want to replace the autocracy of the tsar by the 
autocracy of the bourgeoisie, not the sovereignty of the 
people (see their programme) — but in order that the 
people should moderate its revolutionary spirit, withdraw 
its revolutionary demands and come to some arrangement 
with the tsar; the Cadets want a compromise between the 
tsar and the people. 

As you see, the majority of the Duma was bound to 
consist of compromisers and not of revolutionaries. This 
was already self-evident in the early part of April. 

Thus, on the one hand, the Duma was a boycotted 
and impotent body with insignificant rights; on the 
other hand, it was a body in which the majority was 
non-revolutionary and in favour of a compromise. The 
weak usually take the path of compromise in any case; 
if in addition their strivings are non-revolutionary, they 
are all the more likely to slip into the path of compro- 
mise. That is exactly what was bound to happen with the 
State Duma. It could not entirely take the side of the 
tsar because it wished to limit the tsar's powers; but it 
could not go over to the side of the people because the 
people were making revolutionary demands. Hence, it 
had to take a stand between the tsar and the people 
and endeavour to reconcile the two, that is, to busy itself 
collecting water with a sieve. On the one hand, it had 



PRESENT SITUATION AND UNITY CONGRESS OF WORKERS' PARTY 265 

to try to persuade the people to abandon their "excessive 
demands" and somehow reach an understanding with 
the tsar; but on the other hand, it had to act as a 
go-between, and go to the tsar to plead that he should 
make some slight concession to the people and thereby 
put a stop to the "revolutionary unrest." 

That is the kind of Duma the Unity Congress of the 
Party had to deal with. 

What should have been the Party's attitude towards 
such a Duma? Needless to say, the Party could not un- 
dertake to support such a Duma, because to support the 
Duma means supporting a compromising policy; but 
a compromising policy fundamentally contradicts the 
task of intensifying the revolution, and the workers' 
party must not accept the role of pacifier of the revolu- 
tion. Of course, the Party had to utilise the Duma itself 
as well as the conflicts between the Duma and the govern- 
ment, but that does not mean that it must support the 
non-revolutionary tactics of the Duma. On the contrary, 
to expose the two-faced character of the Duma, ruthlessly 
to criticise it, to drag its treacherous tactics into the 
light of day — such should be the Party's attitude to- 
wards the State Duma. 

And if that is the case, it is clear that the Cadet Duma 
does not express the will of the people, that it cannot 
fulfil the role of representative of the people, that it 
cannot become the political centre of the country and 
unite the people around itself. 

Under these circumstances, it was the Party's duty 
to dispel the false hopes that had been reposed in the 
Duma and to declare publicly that the Duma does not 
express the will of the people and, therefore, cannot 



266 J. V. STALIN 



become a weapon of the revolution; that the chief arena 
of the struggle today is the street and not the Duma. 

At the same time it was clear that the peasant "Group 
of Toil"^^ in the Duma, small in numbers compared with 
the Cadets, could not follow the compromising tactics of 
the Cadets to the end and would very soon have to 
begin to fight them as the betrayers of the people and 
take the path of revolution. It was the Party's duty to 
support the "Group of Toil" in its struggle against the 
Cadets, to develop its revolutionary tendencies to the full, 
to contrast its revolutionary tactics to the non-revolu- 
tionary tactics of the Cadets, and thereby to expose still 
more clearly the treacherous tendencies of the Cadets. 

How did the congress act? What did the congress 
say in its resolution on the State Duma? 

The resolution of the congress says that the Duma 
is an institution that has sprung "from the depths of the 
nation." That is to say, notwithstanding its defects, the 
Duma, nevertheless, expresses the will of the people. 
Clearly, the congress failed to give a correct appraisal 
of the Cadet Duma; the congress forgot that the majority 
in the Duma consists of compromisers; that compromisers 
who reject the revolution cannot express the will of the 
people and, consequently, we have no right to say that 
the Duma has sprung "from the depths of the nation." 

What did the Bolsheviks say on this question at the 
congress? 

They said that "the State Duma, which it is already 
evident has now become Cadet (predominantly) in com- 
position, cannot under any circumstances fulfil the role of 
a genuine representative of the people." That is to say, 
the present Duma has not sprung from the depths of 



PRESENT SITUATION AND UNITY CONGRESS OF WORKERS' PARTY 267 

the people, it is against the people and, therefore, does 
not express the will of the people (see the resolution 
of the Bolsheviks). 

On this question the congress rejected the stand 
taken by the Bolsheviks. 

The resolution of the congress says that "the Duma," 
notwithstanding its "pseudo-constitutional" character, 
nevertheless, "will become a weapon of the revolution" 
... its conflicts with the government may grow to such 
dimensions "as will make it possible to use them as 
the starting point for broad mass movements directed 
towards the overthrow of the present political system." 
This is as much as to say that the Duma may become a 
political centre, rally the revolutionary people around 
itself and raise the standard of revolution. 

Do you hear, workers? The compromising Cadet 
Duma, it appears, may become the centre of the revo- 
lution and find itself at its head — a dog, it appears, can 
give birth to a lamb! There is no need for you to worry — 
henceforth the hegemony of the proletariat and the 
rallying of the people around the proletariat are no 
longer necessary: the non-revolutionary Duma will of 
its own accord rally the revolutionary people around 
itself and everything will be in order! Do you see how 
simple it is to make a revolution? Do you see how the 
present revolution is to be carried to the end? 

Obviously, the congress failed to realise that the 
two-faced Duma, with its two-faced Cadets, must in- 
evitably get stuck between two stools, will try to make 
peace between the tsar and the people and then, like all 
two-faced people, will be obliged to swing over towards 
the side which promises most! 



268 J. V. STALIN 



What did the Bolsheviks say on this point at the 
congress? 

They said that "the conditions are not yet at hand 
for our Party to take the parliamentary path," i.e., we 
cannot yet enter into tranquil parliamentary life; the chief 
arena of the struggle is still the street, and not the Duma 
(see the resolution of the Bolsheviks). 

On this point, too, the congress rejected the reso- 
lution of the Bolsheviks. 

The resolution of the congress says nothing definite 
about the fact that in the Duma there are representatives 
of the revolutionary peasantry (the "Group of Toil") 
who remain a minority, and who will be obliged to re- 
ject the compromising tactics of the Cadets and take 
the path of the revolution; and it says nothing about 
it being necessary to encourage them and support them 
in their struggle against the Cadets or to help them 
to set their feet still more firmly on the revolutionary 
path. 

Obviously, the congress failed to understand that 
the proletariat and the peasantry are the two principal 
forces in the present revolution; that at the present time 
the proletariat, as the leader of the revolution, must sup- 
port the revolutionary peasants in the street as well 
as in the Duma, provided they wage a struggle against 
the enemies of the revolution. 

What did the Bolsheviks say on this point at the 
congress? 

They said that Social-Democracy must ruthlessly 
expose "the inconsistency and vacillation of the Cadets, 
while watching with special attention the elements of 
peasant revolutionary democracy, uniting them, con- 



PRESENT SITUATION AND UNITY CONGRESS OF WORKERS' PARTY 269 

trasting them to the Cadets and supporting those of 
their actions which conform to the interests of the pro- 
letariat" (see resolution). 

The congress also failed to accept this proposal of 
the Bolsheviks. Probably, that was because it too 
vividly expressed the leading role of the proletariat in 
the present struggle; for the congress, as we have seen 
above, regarded the hegemony of the proletariat with 
distrust — the peasantry, it said in effect, must rally 
around the Duma, and not around the proletariat! 

That is why the bourgeois newspaper Nasha Zhizrf^ 
praises the resolution of the congress; that is why the 
Cadets of Nasha Zhizn began to shout in one voice: At 
last the Social-Democrats have come to their senses and 
have abandoned Blanquism (see Nasha Zhizn, No. 432). 

Obviously, it is not for nothing that the enemies 
of the people — the Cadets — are praising the resolution 
of the congress. And it was not for nothing that Rebel 
said: What pleases our enemies is harmful to us! 

IV 

Let us pass to the question of an armed uprising. 

It is no longer a secret to anybody today that action 
by the people is inevitable. Since the crisis and famine 
are growing in town and country, since unrest among the 
proletariat and the peasantry is increasing day by day, 
since the tsarist government is decaying, and since, there- 
fore, the revolution is on the upgrade — it is self-evident 
that life is preparing another action by the people, wider 
and more powerful than the October and December 
actions. It is quite useless to discuss today whether this 



270 J. V. STALIN 



new action is desirable or undesirable, good or bad: it is 
not a matter of what we desire; the fact is that action 
by the people is maturing of its own accord, and that 
it is inevitable. 

But there is action and action. Needless to say, the 
January general strike in St. Petersburg (1905) was an 
action by the people. So also was the October general 
political strike an action by the people, as also was the 
"December clash" in Moscow, and the clash in Latvia. 
It is clear that there were also differences between these 
actions. Whereas in January (1905), the chief role was 
played by the strike, in December the strike served only 
as a beginning and then grew into an armed uprising, 
which assumed the principal role. The actions in January, 
October and December showed that however "peace- 
fully" you may start a general strike, however "deli- 
cately" you may behave in presenting your demands, 
and even if you come on to the battle-field unarmed, it 
must all end in a clash (recall January 9 in St. Peters- 
burg, when the people marched with crosses and por- 
traits of the tsar); the government will, nevertheless, 
resort to guns and rifles; the people will, nevertheless, 
take to arms, and thus, the general strike will, neverthe- 
less, grow into an armed uprising. What does that prove? 
Only that the impending action of the people will not be 
simply a demonstration, but must necessarily assume an 
armed character; thus, the decisive role will be played 
by armed insurrection. It is useless discussing whether 
bloodshed is desirable or undesirable, good or bad: we 
repeat — it is not a matter of what we desire; the fact 
is that armed insurrection will undoubtedly take place, 
and it will be impossible to avert it. 



PRESENT SITUATION AND UNITY CONGRESS OF WORKERS' PARTY 271 

Our task today is to achieve the sovereignty of the peo- 
ple. We want the reins of government to be transferred to 
the hands of the proletariat and the peasantry. Can this 
object be achieved by means of a general strike? The 
facts say that it cannot (recall what we said above). 
Or perhaps the Duma with its grandiloquent Cadets 
will help us, perhaps the sovereignty of the people will be 
established with its aid? The facts tell us that this, too, is 
impossible; for the Cadet Duma wants the autocracy of 
the big bourgeoisie and not the sovereignty of the people 
(recall what we said above). 

Clearly, the only sure path is an armed uprising 
of the proletariat and the peasantry. Only by means of 
an armed uprising can the rule of the tsar be overthrown 
and the rule of the people be established, if, of course, 
this uprising ends in victory. That being the case, since 
the victory of the people is impossible today without 
the victory of the uprising, and since, on the other 
hand, life itself is preparing the ground for armed action 
by the people and, since this action is inevitable — it is 
self-evident that the task of Social-Democracy is con- 
sciously to prepare for this action, consciously to prepare 
the ground for its victory. One of two things: either we 
must reject the sovereignty of the people (a democratic re- 
public) and rest content with a constitutional monarchy — 
and in that case we shall be right in saying that it is 
not our business to organise an armed uprising; or we 
must continue to have as our present aim the sovereignty 
of the people (a democratic republic) and emphatically 
reject a constitutional monarchy — and in that case we 
shall be wrong in saying that it is not our business 
consciously to organise the spontaneously growing action. 



272 J. V. STALIN 



But how should we prepare for an armed uprising? 
How can we facilitate its victory? 

The December action showed that, in addition to 
all our other sins, we Social-Democrats are guilty of 
another great sin against the proletariat. This sin is 
that we failed to take the trouble, or took too little 
trouble, to arm the workers and to organise Red detach- 
ments. Recall December. Who does not remember the 
excited people who rose to the struggle in Tiflis, in the 
west Caucasus, in the south of Russia, in Siberia, in 
Moscow, in St. Petersburg and in Baku? Why did the 
autocracy succeed in dispersing these infuriated people 
so easily? Was it because the people were not yet con- 
vinced that the tsarist government was no good? Of 
course not! Why was it, then? 

First of all because the people had no arms, or too 
few of them. However great your consciousness may be, 
you cannot stand up against bullets with bare hands! 
Yes, they were quite right when they cursed us and 
said: You take our money, but where are the arms? 

Secondly, because we had no trained Red detach- 
ments capable of leading the rest, of procuring arms 
by force of arms and of arming the people. The people 
are heroes in street fighting, but if they are not led by 
their armed brothers and are not set an example, they 
can turn into a mob. 

Thirdly, because the uprising was sporadic and 
unorganised. While Moscow was fighting at the barri- 
cades, St. Petersburg was silent. Tiflis and Kutais were 
preparing for an assault when Moscow was already 
"subdued." Siberia took to arms when the South and the 
Letts were already "vanquished." That shows that 



PRESENT SITUATION AND UNITY CONGRESS OF WORKERS' PARTY 273 

the fighting proletariat entered the uprising split up 
into groups, as a consequence of which the government 
was able to inflict "defeat" upon it with comparative 
ease. 

Fourthly, because our uprising adhered to the pol- 
icy of the defensive and not of the offensive. The 
government itself provoked the December uprising. 
The government attacked us; it had a plan, whereas we 
met the government's attack unprepared; we had no 
thought-out plan, we were obliged to adhere to the policy 
of self-defence and thus dragged at the tail of events. Had 
the people of Moscow, from the very outset, chosen the 
policy of attack, they would have immediately captured 
the Nikolayevsky Railway Station, the government 
would have been unable to transport troops from St. 
Petersburg to Moscow, and thus, the Moscow uprising 
would have lasted longer. That would have exerted 
corresponding influence upon other towns. The same 
must be said about the Letts; had they taken the path 
of attack at the very outset, they would first of all have 
captured artillery and would thus have sapped the forces 
of the government. 

It was not for nothing that Marx said: 

". . . The insurrectionary career once entered upon, 
act with the greatest determination, and on the offen- 
sive. The defensive is the death of every armed rising. . . . 
Surprise your antagonists while their forces are scatter- 
ing, prepare new successes, however small, but daily; 
keep up the moral ascendant which the first successful 
rising has given to you; rally thus those vacillating 
elements to your side which always follow the strongest 
impulse and which always look out for the safer side; 



274 J. V. STALIN 



force your enemies to a retreat before they can collect 
their strength against you; in the words of Danton, the 
greatest master of revolutionary policy yet known: de 
I'audace, de I'audace, encore de I'audace!" (See K. Marx, 
Historical Sketches, p. 95.) 

It was precisely this "audacity" and the policy of an 
offensive that the December uprising lacked. 

We shall be told: these are not the only reasons for 
the December "defeat"; you have forgotten that in De- 
cember the peasantry failed to unite with the proletar- 
iat, and that, too, was one of the main reasons for the 
December retreat. This is the downright truth, and we 
do not intend to forget it. But why did the peasantry 
fail to unite with the proletariat? What was the reason? 
We shall be told: lack of political consciousness. Grant- 
ing that, how should we make the peasants politically 
conscious? By distributing pamphlets? This is not 
enough, of course! Then how? By fighting, by drawing 
them into the struggle, and by leading them during the 
struggle. Today it is the mission of the town to lead the 
countryside, it is the mission of the workers to lead the 
peasants; and if an uprising is not organised in the 
towns, the peasantry will never march with the advanced 
proletariat in this action. 

Such are the facts. 

Hence, the attitude the congress should have adopted 
towards the armed uprising and the slogans it should 
have issued to the Party comrades are self-evident. 

The Party was weak in the matter of arming, and 
arming was a neglected matter in the Party — conse- 
quently, the congress should have said to the Party: 
arm, give concentrated attention to the matter of 



PRESENT SITUATION AND UNITY CONGRESS OF WORKERS' PARTY 275 

arming, so as to meet the impending action at least to 
some extent prepared. 

Further. The Party was weak in the matter of organ- 
ising armed detachments; it did not pay due attention 
to the task of augmenting the number of Red detach- 
ments. Consequently, the congress should have said to 
the Party: form Red detachments, disseminate military 
knowledge among the people, give concentrated attention 
to the task of organising Red detachments, so as to be 
able later on to procure arms by force of arms and extend 
the uprising. 

Further. The December uprising found the prole- 
tariat disunited; nobody thought seriously of organising 
the uprising — consequently, it was the duty of the 
congress to issue a slogan to the Party urging it 
energetically to proceed to unite the militant elements, 
to bring them into action according to a single plan, 
and actively to organise the armed uprising. 

Further. The proletariat, adhered to a defensive 
policy in the armed uprising; it never took the path of 
the offensive; that is what prevented the victory of the 
uprising. Consequently, it was the duty of the congress 
to point out to the Party comrades that the moment of 
victory of the uprising was approaching and that it was 
necessary to pass to the policy of offensive. 

How did the congress act, and what slogans did it 
issue to the Party? 

The congress said that ". . . the Party's main task 
at the present moment is to develop the revolution by 
expanding and intensifying agitation activities among 
broad sections of the proletariat, the peasantry, the 
urban petty bourgeoisie and among the armed forces. 



276 J. V. STALIN 



and by drawing them into the active struggle against 
the government through the constant intervention of 
Social-Democracy, and of the proletariat which it leads, 
in all manifestations of political life in the country. . . ." 
The Party "cannot undertake the obligation of arming 
the people, which can only rouse false hopes, and must 
restrict its tasks to facilitating the self-arming of the 
population and the organisation and arming of fighting 
squads. . . ." "It is the Party's duty to counteract all 
attempts to draw the proletariat into an armed collision 
under unfavourable circumstances . . ." etc., etc. (see 
resolution of the congress). 

It appears, then, that today, at the present moment, 
when we are on the threshold of another action by the 
people, the main thing for achieving the victory of the 
uprising is agitation, while the arming and organising 
of Red detachments is something unimportant, some- 
thing which we must not get enthusiastic about, 
and in relation to which we must "restrict" our activ- 
ities to "facilitating." As regards the necessity of 
organising the uprising, of not carrying it out with scat- 
tered forces, and the necessity of adopting an offen- 
sive policy (recall the words of Marx) — the congress 
said not a word. Clearly, it did not regard these questions 
as important. 

The facts say: Arm and do everything to strengthen 
the Red detachments. The congress, however, answers: 
Do not get too enthusiastic about arming and organising 
Red detachments, "restrict" your activities in this mat- 
ter, because the most important thing is agitation. 

One would think that until now we have been busy 
arming, that we have armed a vast number of comrades 



PRESENT SITUATION AND UNITY CONGRESS OF WORKERS' PARTY 277 

and have organised a large number of detachments, 
but have neglected agitation — and so the congress 
admonishes us: Enough of arming, you have paid quite 
enough attention to that; the main thing is agitation! 

It goes without saying that agitation is always and 
everywhere one of the Party's main weapons; but will 
agitation decide the question of victory in the forthcom- 
ing uprising? Had the congress said this four years 
ago, when the question of an uprising was not yet on 
the order of the day, it would have been understandable; 
but today, when we are on the threshold of an armed 
uprising, when the question of an uprising is on the 
order of the day, when it may start independently and 
in spite of us — what can "mainly" agitation do? What 
can be achieved by means of this "agitation"? 

Or consider this. Let us assume that we have expand- 
ed our agitation; let us assume that the people have 
risen. What then? How can they fight without arms? 
Has not enough blood of unarmed people been shed? 
And besides, of what use are arms to the people if they 
are unable to wield them, if they have not a sufficient 
number of Red detachments? We shall be told: But we 
do not reject arming and Red detachments. Very well, 
but if you fail to devote due attention to the task of 
arming, if you neglect it — it shows that actually you do 
reject it. 

We shall not go into the point that the congress did 
not even hint at the necessity of organising the uprising 
and of adhering to an offensive policy. It could not 
have been otherwise, because the resolution of the con- 
gress lags four or five years behind life, and because, to 
the congress, an uprising was still a theoretical question. 



278 J. V. STALIN 



What did the Bolsheviks say on this question at 
the congress? 

They said that ". . . in the Party's propaganda and 
agitation activities concentrated attention must be given to 
studying the practical experience of the December up- 
rising, to criticising it from the military point of view, 
and to drawing direct lessons from it for the future," 
that "still more energetic activity must be developed in 
augmenting the number of fighting squads, in improv- 
ing their organisation and supplying them with weap- 
ons of all kinds and, in conformity with the lessons 
of experience, not only should Party fighting squads 
be organised, but also squads of sympathisers with 
the Party, and even of non-Party people . . ." that 
"in view of the growing peasant movement, which may 
flare up into a whole uprising in the very near future, 
it is desirable to exert efforts to unite the activities of the 
workers and peasants for the purpose of organising, as far as 
possible, joint and simultaneous military operations . . ." 
that, consequently, ". . . in view of the growth and 
intensification of another political crisis, the prospect 
is opening for the transition from defensive to offensive 
forms of armed struggle . . ." that it is necessary, jointly 
with the soldiers, to launch ". . . most determined offen- 
sive operations against the government . . ." etc. (see the 
resolution of the Bolsheviks). 

That is what the Bolsheviks said. 

But the congress rejected the stand taken by the Bol- 
sheviks. 

After this, it is not difficult to understand why the 
resolutions of the congress were welcomed with such 
enthusiasm by the liberal-Cadets (see Nasha Zhizn, 



PRESENT SITUATION AND UNITY CONGRESS OF WORKERS' PARTY 279 

No. 432): they realised that these resolutions lag several 
years behind the present revolution, that these resolu- 
tions totally fail to express the class tasks of the prole- 
tariat, that these resolutions, if applied, would make the 
proletariat an appendage of the liberals rather than an 
independent force — they realised all this, and that is 
why they were so loud in their praise of them. 

It is the duty of the Party comrades to adopt a critical 
attitude towards the resolutions of the congress and, 
at the proper time, introduce the necessary amendments. 

It is precisely this duty that we had in mind when 
we sat down to write this pamphlet. 

True, we have here touched upon only two resolu- 
tions: "On the Attitude To Be Taken Towards the State 
Duma," and "On Armed Insurrection," but these two reso- 
lutions are, undoubtedly, the main resolutions, which 
most distinctly express the congress's position on tactics. 

Thus, we have arrived at the main conclusion, viz., 
that the question that confronts the Party is: should the 
class-conscious proletariat be the leader in the present revolu- 
tion, or should it drag at the tail of the bourgeois democrats? 

We have seen that the settlement of this question 
one way or another will determine the settlement of 
all the other questions. 

All the more carefully, therefore, should the com- 
rades weigh the essence of these two positions. 

Reprinted from the pamphlet 
issued by Proletariat Publishers 
in 1906 

Signed: Comrade K. 
Translated from the Georgian 



THE CLASS STRUGGLE 



"The unity of the bourgeoisie can be 
shaken only by the unity of the pro- 
letariat. " 

Karl Marx 

Present-day society is extremely complex! It is a 
motley patchwork of classes and groups — the big, mid- 
dle and petty bourgeoisie; the big, middle and petty 
feudal landlords; journeymen, unskilled labourers and 
skilled factory workers; the higher, middle and lower 
clergy; the higher, middle and minor bureaucracy; a 
heterogeneous intelligentsia, and other groups of a 
similar kind. Such is the motley picture our society 
presents! 

But it is also obvious that the further society devel- 
ops the more clearly two main trends stand out in this 
complexity, and the more sharply this complex society 
divides up into two opposite camps — the capitalist 
camp and the proletarian camp. The January economic 
strikes (1905) clearly showed that Russia is indeed divid- 
ed into two camps. The November strikes in St. Pe- 
tersburg (1905) and the June- July strikes all over Rus- 
sia (1906), brought the leaders of the two camps into 
collision and thereby fully exposed the present-day class 
antagonisms. Since then the capitalist camp has been 
wide awake. In that camp feverish and ceaseless prepa- 
ration is going on; local associations of capitalists are being 



THE CLASS STRUGGLE 281 



formed, the local associations combine to form regional 
associations and the regional associations combine in all- 
Russian associations; funds and newspapers are being 
started, and all-Russian congresses and conferences of 
capitalists are being convened. . . . 

Thus, the capitalists are organising in a separate 
class with the object of curbing the proletariat. 

On the other hand, the proletarian camp is wide awake 
too. Here, too, feverish preparations for the impending 
struggle are being made. In spite of persecution by the 
reaction, here, too, local trade unions are being formed, 
the local unions combine to form regional unions, 
trade union funds are being started, the trade union 
press is growing, and all-Russian congresses and con- 
ferences of workers' unions are being held. . . . 

It is evident that the proletarians are also organising 
in a separate class with the object of curbing exploi- 
tation. 

There was a time when "peace and quiet" reigned in 
society. At that time there was no sign of these classes 
and their class organisations. A struggle went on at that 
time too, of course, but that struggle bore a local and not 
a general class character; the capitalists had no associa- 
tions of their own, and each capitalist was obliged to deal 
with "his" workers by himself. Nor did the workers have 
any unions and, consequently, the workers in each factory 
were obliged to rely only on their own strength. True, 
local Social-Democratic organisations led the workers' 
economic struggle, but everybody will agree that this 
leadership was weak and casual; the Social-Democratic 
organisations could scarcely cope with their own Party 
affairs. 



282 J. V. STALIN 



The January economic strikes, however, marked a 
turning point. The capitalists got busy and began to 
organise local associations. The capitalist associations in 
St. Petersburg, Moscow, Warsaw, Riga and other towns 
were brought into being by the January strikes. As regards 
the capitalists in the oil, manganese, coal and sugar industries, 
they converted their old, "peaceful" associations into 
"fighting" associations, and began to fortify their posi- 
tions. But the capitalists were not content with this. They 
decided to form an all-Russian association, and so, in 
March 1905, on the initiative of Morozov, they gathered at 
a general congress in Moscow. That was the first all-Rus- 
sian congress of capitalists. Here they concluded an agree- 
ment, by which they pledged themselves not to make 
any concessions to the workers without previous arrange- 
ment among themselves and, in "extreme" cases — 
to declare a lockout* That was the starting point of a 
fierce struggle between the capitalists and the prole- 
tarians. It marked the opening of a series of big lockouts 
in Russia. To conduct a big struggle a strong association 
is needed, and so the capitalists decided to meet once again 
to form a still more closely-knit association. Thus, three 
months after the first congress (in July 1905), the second 
all-Russian congress of capitalists was convened in 
Moscow. Here they reaffirmed the resolutions of the first 
congress, reaffirmed the necessity of lockouts, and elected 
a committee to draft the rules and to arrange for the 
convocation of another congress. Meanwhile, the resolu- 



* Lockout — a strike of employers, during which the em- 
ployers deliberately shut down their factories in order to break 
the resistance of the workers and to frustrate their demands. 



THE CLASS STRUGGLE 283 



tions of the congresses were put into effect. Facts have 
shown that the capitalists are carrying out these resolu- 
tions to the letter. If you recall the lockouts the capital- 
ists declared in Riga, Warsaw, Odessa, Moscow, and 
other large cities; if you recall the November days 
in St. Petersburg, when 72 capitalists threatened 200,000 
St. Petersburg workers with a cruel lockout, then you 
will easily understand what a mighty force the all-Rus- 
sian association of capitalists represents, and how punctil- 
iously they are carrying out the decisions of their asso- 
ciation. Then, after the second congress, the capitalists 
arranged another congress (in January 1906), and finally, 
in April this year, the all-Russian inaugural congress 
of the capitalists took place, at which uniform rules were 
adopted and a Central Bureau was elected. As the 
newspapers report, these rules have already been sanc- 
tioned by the government. 

Thus, there can be no doubt that the Russian big 
bourgeoisie has already organised in a separate class, 
that it has its own local, regional and central organisa- 
tions, and can rouse the capitalists of the whole of Russia 
in conformity with a single plan. 

To reduce wages, lengthen the working day, weaken 
the proletariat and smash its organisations — such are 
the objects of the general association of capitalists. 

Meanwhile, the workers' trade union movement has 
been growing and developing. Here, too, the influence of 
the January economic strikes (1905) made itself felt. The 
movement assumed a mass character; its needs grew wider 
and, in the course of time, it became evident that the 
Social-Democratic organisations could not conduct both 
Party and trade union affairs. Something in the nature 



284 J. V. STALIN 



of a division of labour between the Party and the trade 
unions was needed. Party affairs had to be directed 
by the Party organisations, and trade union affairs by trade 
unions. And so the organisation of trade unions began. 
Trade unions were formed all over the country — in 
Moscow, St. Petersburg, Warsaw, Odessa, Riga, Kharkov 
and Tiflis. True, the reactionaries placed obstacles in 
the way, but in spite of that the needs of the movement 
gained the upper hand and the unions grew in number. 
Soon the appearance of local unions was followed by the 
appearance of regional unions and, finally, things reached 
the stage when, in September last year, an all-Russian 
conference of trade unions was convened. That was the 
first conference of workers' unions. The upshot of that 
conference was, among other things, that it drew together 
the unions in the different towns and finally elected 
a Central Bureau to prepare for the convocation of 
a general congress of trade unions. The October days 
arrived — and the trade unions became twice as strong 
as they were before. Local and, finally, regional unions 
grew day by day. True, the "December defeat" appre- 
ciably checked the rate of formation of trade unions, 
but later the trade union movement recovered and things 
went so well that in February of this year the second 
conference of trade unions was called, and it was more 
widely and fully representative than the first conference. 
The conference recognised the necessity of forming local, 
regional and all-Russian centres, elected an "organising 
commission" to make arrangements for the forthcoming 
all-Russian congress, and passed appropriate resolu- 
tions on current questions affecting the trade union 
movement. 



THE CLASS STRUGGLE 285 



Thus, there can be no doubt that, notwithstanding 
the reaction that is raging, the proletariat is also organ- 
ising in a separate class, is steadily strengthening its 
local, regional and central trade union organisations, 
and is also steadily striving to unite its innumerable 
fellow-workers against the capitalists. 

To secure higher wages, a shorter working day, bet- 
ter conditions of labour, to curb exploitation and to 
thwart the capitalist associations — such are the objects 
of the workers' trade unions. 

Thus, present-day society is splitting up into two 
big camps; each camp is organising in a separate class; 
the class struggle that has flared up between them is 
expanding and growing more intense every day, and all 
other groups are gathering around these two camps. 

Marx said that every class struggle is a political 
struggle. This means that, if the proletarians and capi- 
talists are waging an economic struggle against each 
other today, they will be compelled to wage a political 
struggle tomorrow and thus protect their respective 
class interests in a struggle that bears two forms. The 
capitalists have their particular business interests. And 
it is to protect these interests that their economic organ- 
isations exist. But in addition to their particular busi- 
ness interests, they also have common class interests, 
namely, to strengthen capitalism. And it is to protect 
these common interests that they must wage a political 
struggle and need a political party. The Russian capi- 
talists solved this problem very easily: they realised 
that the only party which "straightforwardly and 
fearlessly" championed their interests was the Octobrist 
Party, and they therefore resolved to rally around 



286 J. V. STALIN 



that party and to accept its ideological leadership. Since 
then the capitalists have been waging their political 
struggle under the ideological leadership of this party; 
with its aid they exert influence on the present govern- 
ment (which suppresses the workers' unions but hastens 
to sanction the formation of capitalist associations), they 
secure the election of its candidates to the Duma, etc., etc. 

Thus, economic struggle with the aid of associations, 
and general political struggle under the ideological 
leadership of the Octobrist Party — that is the form the 
class struggle waged by the big bourgeoisie is assuming 
today. 

On the other hand, similar phenomena are also ob- 
served in the proletarian class movement today. To pro- 
tect the trade interests of the proletarians trade unions 
are being formed, and these fight for higher wages, a 
shorter working day, etc. But in addition to trade inter- 
ests, the proletarians have also common class interests, 
namely, the socialist revolution and the establishment 
of socialism. It is impossible, however, to achieve the 
socialist revolution until the proletariat conquers polit- 
ical power as a united and indivisible class. That is 
why the proletariat must wage the political struggle, 
and why it needs a political party that will act as the 
ideological leader of its political movement. Most of 
the workers' unions are, of course, non-party and neutral; 
but this merely means that they are independent of the 
party only in financial and organisational matters, i.e., 
they have their own separate funds, their own leading 
bodies, call their own congresses and, officially, are not 
bound by the decisions of political parties. As regards 
the ideological dependence of the trade unions upon any 



THE CLASS STRUGGLE 287 



given political party, such dependence must undoubtedly 
exist and cannot help existing, because, apart from every- 
thing else, members of different parties belong to the 
unions and inevitably carry their political convictions 
into them. Clearly, if the proletariat cannot dispense 
with the political struggle, it cannot dispense with the 
ideological leadership of some political party. More than 
that. It must itself seek a party which will worthily lead 
its unions to the "promised land," to socialism. But 
here the proletariat must be on the alert and act with 
circumspection. It must carefully examine the ideolog- 
ical stock-in-trade of the political parties and freely 
accept the ideological leadership of the party that will 
courageously and consistently champion its class inter- 
ests, hold aloft the Red Flag of the proletariat, and 
boldly lead it to political power, to the socialist revo- 
lution. 

Until now this role has been carried out by the Rus- 
sian Social-Democratic Labour Party and, consequently, 
it is the task of the trade unions to accept its ideological 
leadership. 

It is common knowledge that they actually do so. 

Thus, economic clashes with the aid of trade unions, 
political attacks under the ideological leadership of 
Social-Democracy — that is the form the class struggle 
of the proletariat has assumed today. 

There can be no doubt that the class struggle will 
flare up with increasing vigour. The task of the prole- 
tariat is to introduce the system and the spirit of organ- 
isation into its struggle. To accomplish this, it is neces- 
sary to strengthen the unions and to unite them, and in 
this the all-Russian congress of trade unions can render 



288 J. V. STALIN 



a great service. Not a "non-party workers' congress," 
but a congress of workers' trade unions is what we need 
today in order that the proletariat shall be organised 
in a united and indivisible class. At the same time, the 
proletariat must exert every effort to strengthen and 
fortify the party which will act as the ideological and 
political leader of its class struggle. 

Akhali Droyeba 
{New r/m&s),™No. 1, 
November 14, 1906 

Signed: Ko. . . . 

Translated from the Georgian 



"FACTORY LEGISLATION" 
AND THE PROLETARIAN STRUGGLE 

(Concerning the Two Laws of November 15) 



There was a time when our labour movement was in 
its initial stages. At that time the proletariat was split 
up into separate groups and did not think of waging 
a common struggle. Railway workers, miners, factory 
workers, artisans, shop assistants, and clerks — such 
were the groups into which the Russian proletariat was 
divided. Moreover, the workers in each group, in their 
turn, were split up according to the towns, big or small, 
they lived and worked in, with no link, either party 
or trade union, between them. Thus, there was no sign 
of the proletariat as a united and indivisible class. Con- 
sequently, there was no sign of the proletarian struggle, 
as a general class offensive. That is why the tsarist gov- 
ernment was able calmly to pursue its "traditional" 
policy. That is why, when the "Workers' Insurance 
Bill" was introduced in the State Council in 1893, 
Pobedonostsev, the inspirer of the reaction, jeered at the 
sponsors and said with aplomb: "Gentlemen, you have 
taken all this trouble for nothing; I assure you that 
there is no labour problem in our country. . . ." 

But time passed, the economic crisis drew near, 
strikes became more frequent, and the disunited prole- 
tariat gradually organised itself in a united class. The 



290 J. V. STALIN 



Strikes of 1903 already showed that "there is a labour 
problem in our country," and that it had existed for a 
long time. The strikes in January and February 1905 
proclaimed to the world for the first time that the pro- 
letariat, as a united class, was growing and becoming 
mature in Russia. Then, the general strikes in October- 
December 1905, and the "ordinary" strikes in June and 
July 1906, actually drew together the proletarians in 
the different towns, actually welded together the shop 
assistants, clerks, artisans and industrial workers in a 
united class, and thereby loudly proclaimed to the world 
that the forces of the once disunited proletariat had 
now taken the path of union and were organising 
themselves in a united class. The effect of the general 
political strike as a method of waging the common prole- 
tarian struggle against the present system also made 
itself felt. . . . Now it was no longer possible to deny the 
existence of the "labour problem," now the tsarist gov- 
ernment was already obliged to reckon with the move- 
ment. And so, the reactionaries gathered in their offices 
and began to set up different commissions and to draft 
"factory laws": the Shidlovsky Commission,^" the Kokov- 
tsev Commission,^' the Associations Act**^ (see the "Man- 
ifesto" of October 17), the Witte-Durnovo circulars,**^ 
various projects and plans, and lastly the two laws of 
November 15 applying to artisans and commercial em- 
ployees. 

So long as the movement was weak, so long as it 
lacked a mass character, the reaction employed only one 
method against the proletariat — imprisonment, Siberia, 
the whip and the gallows. Always and everywhere the 
reaction pursues one object: to split the proletariat into 



"FACTORY LEGISLATION" AND PROLETARIAN STRUGGLE 291 

small groups, to smash its vanguard, to intimidate and 
win over to its side the neutral masses, and thus create 
confusion in the proletarian camp. We have seen that 
it achieved this object famously with the aid of whips and 
prisons. 

But things took an entirely different turn when the 
movement assumed a mass character. Now the reaction 
had no longer to deal only with "ringleaders" — it was 
faced by countless masses in all their revolutionary 
grandeur. And it had to reckon precisely with these 
masses. But it is impossible to hang the masses; you cannot 
banish them to Siberia, there are not enough prisons to 
hold them. As for lashing them with whips, that is not 
always to the advantage of the reaction now that the 
ground under its feet has long been shaken. Clearly, 
in addition to the old methods, a new, "more cultured" 
method had to be employed, which, in the opinion of 
the reaction, might aggravate the disagreements in the 
camp of the proletariat, rouse false hopes among the 
backward section of the workers, induce them to abandon 
the struggle and rally around the government. 

"Factory legislation" is precisely this new method. 

Thus, while still adhering to the old methods, the tsar- 
ist government wants, at the same time, to utilise "fac- 
tory legislation" and, consequently, to solve the "burn- 
ing labour problem" by means of both the whip and the 
law. By means of promises of a shorter working day, the 
protection of child and female labour, improvement 
in sanitary conditions, workers' insurance, abolition of 
fines, and other benefits of a similar kind, it seeks to 
win the confidence of the backward section of the workers 
and thereby dig the grave of proletarian class unity. 



292 J. V. STALIN 



The tsarist government knows very well that it was never 
so necessary for it to engage in such "activity" as it 
is now, at this moment when the October general strike 
has united the proletarians in the different industries 
and has struck at the roots of reaction, when a future 
general strike may grow into an armed struggle and 
overthrow the old system, and when, consequently, the 
reaction must, for its very life, provoke confusion in the 
labour camp, win the confidence of the backward work- 
ers, and win them over to its side. 

In this connection it is extremely interesting to note 
that, with its laws of November 15, the reaction gra- 
ciously turned its gaze only upon shop assistants and 
artisans, whereas it sends the best sons of the industrial 
proletariat to prison and to the gallows. But this is not 
surprising when you come to think of it. Firstly, shop 
assistants, artisans and employees in commercial estab- 
lishments are not concentrated in big factories and mills 
as the industrial workers are; they are scattered among 
small enterprises, they are relatively less class conscious 
and, consequently, can be more easily deceived than the 
others. Secondly, shop assistants, office clerks and arti- 
sans constitute a large section of the proletariat of present- 
day Russia and, consequently, their desertion of the 
militant proletarians would appreciably weaken the 
forces of the proletariat both in the present elections and 
in the forthcoming action. Lastly, it is common knowl- 
edge that the urban petty bourgeoisie is of great impor- 
tance in the present revolution; that Social-Democracy 
must revolutionise it under the hegemony of the prole- 
tariat; and that nobody can win over the petty bourgeoisie 
so well as the artisans, shop assistants and office clerks 



"FACTORY LEGISLATION" AND PROLETARIAN STRUGGLE 293 

who stand closer to it than the rest of the proletarians. 
Clearly, if the shop assistants and artisans desert the 
proletariat the petty bourgeoisie will turn away from 
it too, and the proletariat will be doomed to isolation 
in the towns, which is exactly what the tsarist govern- 
ment wants. In the light of these facts, the reason why 
the reaction concocted the laws of November 15, which 
affect only artisans, shop assistants and office clerks, 
becomes self-evident. The industrial proletariat will not 
trust the government whatever it may do, so "factory 
legislation" would be wasted on it. Maybe only bullets 
can bring the proletariat to its senses. What laws can- 
not do, bullets must do! . . . 

That is what the tsarist government thinks. 

And that is the opinion not only of our government, 
but also of every other anti-proletarian government — 
irrespective of whether it is feudal-autocratic, bourgeois- 
monarchist or bourgeois-republican. The fight against 
the proletariat is waged by means of bullets and laws 
everywhere, and that will go on until the socialist revo- 
lution breaks out, until socialism is established. Recall 
the years 1824 and 1825 in constitutional England, 
when the law granting freedom to strike was being draft- 
ed, while at the same time the prisons were crammed with 
workers on strike. Recall republican France in the forties 
of last century, when there was talk about "factory 
legislation," while at the same time the streets of Paris 
ran with workers' blood. Recall all these and numer- 
ous other cases of the same kind and you will see that 
it is precisely as we have said. 

That, however, does not mean that the proletariat 
cannot utilise such laws. True, in passing "factory laws" 



294 J. V. STALIN 



the reaction has its own plans in view — it wants to curb 
the proletariat: but step by step life is frustrating the 
reaction's plans, and under such circumstances clauses 
beneficial to the proletariat always creep into the laws. 
This happens because no "factory law" comes into being 
without a reason, without a struggle; the government 
does not pass a single "factory law" until the workers 
come out to fight, until the government is compelled 
to satisfy the workers' demands. History shows that 
every "factory law" is preceded by a partial or general 
strike. The law of June 1882 (concerning the employ- 
ment of children, the length of the working day for them, 
and the institution of factory inspection), was preceded 
by strikes in Narva, Perm, St. Petersburg and Zhirardov 
in that same year. The laws of June-October 1886 (on 
fines, pay-books, etc.) were the direct result of the strikes 
in the central area in 1885-86. The law of June 1897 
(shortening the working day) was preceded by the strikes 
in St. Petersburg in 1895-96. The laws of 1903 (concerning 
"employers' liability" and "shop stewards") were the 
direct result of the "strikes in the south" in the same year 
Lastly, the laws of November 15, 1906 (on a shorter work- 
ing day and Sunday rest for shop assistants, office clerks 
and artisans), are the direct result of the strikes that 
took place all over Russia in June and July this year. 
As you see, every "factory law" was preceded by a 
movement of the masses who in one way or another 
achieved the satisfaction of their demands, if not in 
full, then at least in part. It is self-evident, therefore, 
that however bad a "factory law" may be, it, never- 
theless, contains several clauses which the proletariat 
can utilise for the purpose of intensifying its struggle 



"FACTORY LEGISLATION" AND PROLETARIAN STRUGGLE 295 

Needless to say, it must grasp such clauses and use them 
as instruments with which still further to strengthen its 
organisations and to stir up more fiercely the proletarian 
struggle, the struggle for the socialist revolution. Bebel 
was right when he said: "The devil's head must be cut 
off with his own sword". . . . 

In this respect, both laws of November 15 are 
extremely interesting. Of course, they contain numerous 
bad clauses, but they also contain clauses which the 
reaction introduced unconsciously, but which the pro- 
letariat must utilise consciously. 

Thus, for example, although both laws are called 
laws "for the protection of labour," they contain atro- 
cious clauses which completely nullify all "protection 
of labour," and which, here and there, even the employers 
will shrink from utilising. Both laws establish a twelve- 
hour day in commercial establishments and artisans' 
workshops, in spite of the fact that in many places the 
twelve-hour day has already been abolished and a ten- or 
an eight-hour day has been introduced. Both laws 
permit two hours overtime per day (making a fourteen- 
hour day) over a period of forty days in commercial 
establishments, and sixty days in workshops, in spite 
of the fact that nearly everywhere all overtime has been 
abolished. At the same time, the employers are granted 
the right, "by agreement with the workers," i.e., by 
coercing the workers, to increase overtime and lengthen 
the working day to seventeen hours, etc., etc. 

The proletariat will not, of course, surrender to the 
employers a single shred of the rights they have already 
won, and the fables in the above-mentioned laws will 
remain the ridiculous fables they really are. 



296 J. V. STALIN 



On the other hand, the laws contain clauses which 
the proletariat can make good use of to strengthen its 
position. Both laws say that where the working day is 
not less than eight hours, the workers must be given a two 
hours' break for dinner. It is well known that at present 
artisans, shop assistants and office clerks do not every- 
where enjoy a two hours' break. Both laws also say that 
persons under seventeen have the right, in addition to these 
two hours, to absent themselves from the shop or workshop 
for another three hours a day to attend school, which of 
course will be a great relief for our young comrades. . . . 

There can be no doubt that the proletariat will make 
fitting use of such clauses in the laws of November 15, 
will duly intensify its proletarian struggle, and show the 
world once again that the devil's head must be cut off 
with his own sword. 

Akhali Droveba 
(New Times), No. 4, 
December 4, 1906 



Signed: Ko. . . . 

Translated from the Georgian 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM? 



84 



The hub of modern social life is the class struggle. 
In the course of this struggle each class is guided by 
its own ideology. The bourgeoisie has its own ideology — 
so-called liberalism. The proletariat also has its own 
ideology — this, as is well known, is socialism. 

Liberalism must not be regarded as something whole 
and indivisible: it is subdivided into different trends, 
corresponding to the different strata of the bourgeoisie. 

Nor is socialism whole and indivisible: in it there 
are also different trends. 

We shall not here examine liberalism — that task 
had better be left for another time. We want to acquaint 
the reader only with socialism and its trends. We think 
that he will find this more interesting. 

Socialism is divided into three main trends: re- 
formism, anarchism and Marxism. 

Reformism (Bernstein and others), which regards 
socialism as a remote goal and nothing more, reformism, 
which actually repudiates the socialist revolution and 
aims at establishing socialism by peaceful means, re- 
formism, which advocates not class struggle but class 
collaboration — this reformism is decaying day by day, 
is day by day losing all semblance of socialism and. 



298 J. V. STALIN 



in our opinion, it is totally unnecessary to examine it 
in these articles when defining socialism. 

It is altogether different with Marxism and anarch- 
ism: both are at the present time recognised as social- 
ist trends, they are waging a fierce struggle against 
each other, both are trying to present themselves to the 
proletariat as genuinely socialist doctrines, and, of course, 
a study and comparison of the two will be far more in- 
teresting for the reader. 

We are not the kind of people who, when the word 
"anarchism" is mentioned, turn away contemptuously 
and say with a supercilious wave of the hand: "Why waste 
time on that, it's not worth talking about!" We think 
that such cheap "criticism" is undignified and useless. 

Nor are we the kind of people who console them- 
selves with the thought that the Anarchists "have no 
masses behind them and, therefore, are not so danger- 
ous." It is not who has a larger or smaller "mass" follow- 
ing today, but the essence of the doctrine that matters. 
If the "doctrine" of the Anarchists expresses the truth, 
then it goes without saying that it will certainly hew a 
path for itself and will rally the masses around itself. 
If, however, it is unsound and built up on a false foun- 
dation, it will not last long and will remain suspended 
in mid-air. But the unsoundness of anarchism must be 
proved. 

Some people believe that Marxism and anarchism 
are based on the same principles and that the disagree- 
ments between them concern only tactics, so that, in 
the opinion of these people, it is quite impossible to 
draw a contrast between these two trends. 

This is a great mistake. 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 299 

We believe that the Anarchists are real enemies of 
Marxism. Accordingly, we also hold that a real struggle 
must be waged against real enemies. Therefore, it is 
necessary to examine the "doctrine" of the Anarchists 
from beginning to end and weigh it up thoroughly from 
all aspects. 

The point is that Marxism and anarchism are built 
up on entirely different principles, in spite of the fact 
that both come into the arena of the struggle under the 
flag of socialism. The cornerstone of anarchism is the 
individual, whose emancipation, according to its tenets, 
is the principal condition for the emancipation of the 
masses, the collective body. According to the tenets of 
anarchism, the emancipation of the masses is impossible 
until the individual is emancipated. Accordingly, its slo- 
gan is: "Everything for the individual." The cornerstone 
of Marxism, however, is the masses, whose emancipa- 
tion, according to its tenets, is the principal condition for 
the emancipation of the individual. That is to say, accord- 
ing to the tenets of Marxism, the emancipation of the indi- 
vidual is impossible until the masses are emancipated. 
Accordingly, its slogan is: "Everything for the masses." 

Clearly, we have here two principles, one negating 
the other, and not merely disagreements on tactics. 

The object of our articles is to place these two op- 
posite principles side by side, to compare Marxism with 
anarchism, and thereby throw light on their respective 
virtues and defects. At this point we think it necessary 
to acquaint the reader with the plan of these articles. 

We shall begin with a description of Marxism, deal, 
in passing, with the Anarchists' views on Marxism, 
and then proceed to criticise anarchism itself. Namely: 



300 J. V. STALIN 



we shall expound the dialectical method, the Anarchists' 
views on this method, and our criticism; the materialist 
theory, the Anarchists' views and our criticism (here, 
too, we shall discuss the socialist revolution, the socialist 
dictatorship, the minimum programme, and tactics gen- 
erally); the philosophy of the Anarchists and our criti- 
cism; the socialism of the Anarchists and our criticism; 
anarchist tactics and organisation — and, in conclusion, 
we shall give our deductions. 

We shall try to prove that, as advocates of small 
community socialism, the Anarchists are not genuine 
Socialists. 

We shall also try to prove that, in so far as they 
repudiate the dictatorship of the proletariat, the Anarch- 
ists are also not genuine revolutionaries. . . . 

And so, let us proceed with our subject. 

I 

THE DIALECTICAL METHOD 

Everything in the world is in motion. . . . 
Life changes, productive forces grow, old 
relations collapse. 

Karl Marx 

Marxism is not only the theory of socialism, it is 
an integral world outlook, a philosophical system, from 
which Marx's proletarian socialism logically follows. 
This philosophical system is called dialectical mate- 
rialism. 

Hence, to expound Marxism means to expound also 
dialectical materialism. 

Why is this system called dialectical materialism? 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 301 

Because its method is dialectical, and its theory is 
materialistic. 

What is the dialectical method? 

It is said that social life is in continual motion and 
development. And that is true: life must not be regarded 
as something immutable and static; it never remains at 
one level, it is in eternal motion, in an eternal process 
of destruction and creation. Therefore, life always con- 
tains the new and the old, the growing and the dying, 
the revolutionary and the counter-revolutionary. 

The dialectical method tells us that we must regard 
life as it actually is. We have seen that life is in continual 
motion; consequently, we must regard life in its motion 
and ask: Where is life going? We have seen that life 
presents a picture of constant destruction and creation; 
consequently, we must examine life in its process of 
destruction and creation and ask: What is being destroyed 
and what is being created in life? 

That which in life is born and grows day by day 
is invincible, its progress cannot be checked. That is to 
say, if, for example, in life the proletariat as a class is 
born and grows day by day, no matter how weak and small 
in numbers it may be today, in the long run it must 
triumph. Why? Because it is growing, gaining strength 
and marching forward. On the other hand, that which 
in life is growing old and advancing to its grave must 
inevitably suffer defeat, even if today it represents a 
titanic force. That is to say, if, for example, the bour- 
geoisie is gradually losing ground and is slipping farther 
and farther back every day, then, no matter how strong 
and numerous it may be today, it must, in the long run, 
suffer defeat. Why? Because as a class it is decaying. 



302 J. V. STALIN 



growing feeble, growing old, and becoming a burden 
to life. 

Hence arose the well-known dialectical proposition: 
all that which really exists, i.e., all that which grows 
day by day is rational, and all that which decays day 
by day is irrational and, consequently, cannot avoid 
defeat. 

For example. In the eighties of the last century a 
great controversy flared up among the Russian revolu- 
tionary intelligentsia. The Narodniks asserted that the 
main force that could undertake the task of "emancipating 
Russia" was the petty bourgeoisie, rural and urban. 
Why? — the Marxists asked them. Because, answered the 
Narodniks, the rural and urban petty bourgeoisie now 
constitute the majority and, moreover, they are poor, 
they live in poverty. 

To this the Marxists replied: It is true that the rural 
and urban petty bourgeoisie now constitute the majority 
and are really poor, but is that the point? The petty 
bourgeoisie has long constituted the majority, but up 
to now it has displayed no initiative in the struggle for 
"freedom" without the assistance of the proletariat. 
Why? Because the petty bourgeoisie as a class is not 
growing; on the contrary, it is disintegrating day by day 
and breaking up into bourgeois and proletarians. On the 
other hand, nor is poverty of decisive importance here, of 
course: "tramps" are poorer than the petty bourgeoisie, 
but nobody will say that they can undertake the task of 
"emancipating Russia." 

As you see, the point is not which class today con- 
stitutes the majority, or which class is poorer, but which 
class is gaining strength and which is decaying. 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 303 

And as the proletariat is the only class which is 
steadily growing and gaining strength, which is pushing 
social life forward and rallying all the revolutionary ele- 
ments around itself, our duty is to regard it as the main 
force in the present-day movement, join its ranks and 
make its progressive strivings our strivings. 

That is how the Marxists answered. 

Obviously the Marxists looked at life dialectically, 
whereas the Narodniks argued metaphysically — they 
pictured social life as having become static at a par- 
ticular stage. 

That is how the dialectical method looks upon the 
development of life. 

But there is movement and movement. There was 
movement in social life during the "December days," 
when the proletariat, straightening its back, stormed 
arms depots and launched an attack upon reaction. But 
the movement of preceding years, when the proletariat, 
under the conditions of "peaceful" development, limited 
itself to individual strikes and the formation of small 
trade unions, must also be called social movement. 

Clearly, movement assumes different forms. 

And so the dialectical method says that movement has 
two forms: the evolutionary and the revolutionary form. 

Movement is evolutionary when the progressive ele- 
ments spontaneously continue their daily activities and 
introduce minor, quantitative changes into the old order. 

Movement is revolutionary when the same elements 
combine, become imbued with a single idea and sweep 
down upon the enemy camp with the object of uprooting 
the old order and of introducing qualitative changes in 
life, of establishing a new order. 



304 J. V. STALIN 



Evolution prepares for revolution and creates the 
ground for it; revolution consummates the process of 
evolution and facilitates its further activity. 

Similar processes take place in nature. The history 
of science shows that the dialectical method is a truly 
scientific method: from astronomy to sociology, in every 
field we find confirmation of the idea that nothing is 
eternal in the universe, everything changes, everything 
develops. Consequently, everything in nature must be 
regarded from the point of view of movement, develop- 
ment. And this means that the spirit of dialectics per- 
meates the whole of present-day science. 

As regards the forms of movement, as regards the 
fact that according to dialectics, minor, quantitative 
changes sooner or later lead to major, qualitative changes — 
this law applies with equal force to the history of nature 
Mendeleyev's "periodic system of elements" clearly 
shows how very important in the history of nature is 
the emergence of qualitative changes out of quantitative 
changes. The same thing is shown in biology by the 
theory of neo-Lamarckism, to which neo-Darwinism is 
yielding place. 

We shall say nothing about other facts, on which 
F. Engels has thrown sufficiently full light in his Anti- 
Diihring. 

Such is the content of the dialectical method. 

* 

How do the Anarchists look upon the dialectical 
method? 

Everybody knows that Hegel was the father of the 
dialectical method. Marx purged and improved this 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 305 

method. The Anarchists are aware of this, of course. 
They know that Hegel was a conservative, and so, taking 
advantage of this, they vehemently revile Hegel as a 
supporter of "restoration," they try with the utmost 
zeal to "prove" that "Hegel is a philosopher of resto- 
ration . . . that he eulogizes bureaucratic constitu- 
tionalism in its absolute form, that the general idea of 
his philosophy of history is subordinate to and serves 
the philosophical trend of the period of restoration," 
and so on and so forth (see Nobati,^^ No. 6. Article by 
V. Cherkezishvili.) 

The well-known Anarchist Kropotkin tries to "prove" 
the same thing in his works (see, for example, his Science 
and Anarchism, in Russian). 

Our Kropotkinites, from Cherkezishvili right down 
to Sh. G., all with one voice echo Kropotkin (see No- 
bati). 

True, nobody contests what they say on this point; 
on the contrary, everybody agrees that Hegel was not 
a revolutionary. Marx and Engels themselves proved 
before anybody else did, in their Critique of Critical 
Criticism, that Hegel's views on history fundamentally 
contradict the idea of the sovereignty of the people. But 
in spite of this, the Anarchists go on trying to "prove," 
and deem it necessary to go on day in and day out trying 
to "prove," that Hegel was a supporter of "restoration." 
Why do they do this? Probably, in order by all this to 
discredit Hegel and make their readers feel that the 
"reactionary" Hegel's method also cannot be other than 
"repugnant" and unscientific. 

The Anarchists think that they can refute the dia- 
lectical method in this way. 



306 J. V. STALIN 



We affirm that in this way they can prove nothing 
but their own ignorance. Pascal and Leibnitz were not 
revolutionaries, but the mathematical method they 
discovered is recognised today as a scientific method. 
Mayer and Helmholtz were not revolutionaries, but their 
discoveries in the field of physics became the basis of 
science. Nor were Lamarck and Darwin revolutionaries, 
but their evolutionary method put biological science 
on its feet. . . . Why, then, should the fact not be admitted 
that, in spite of his conservatism, Hegel succeeded in 
working out a scientific method which is called the 
dialectical method? 

No, in this way the Anarchists will prove nothing 
but their own ignorance. 

To proceed. In the opinion of the Anarchists, "dia- 
lectics is metaphysics," and as they "want to free science 
from metaphysics, philosophy from theology," they 
repudiate the dialectical method (see Nobati, Nos. 3 
and 9. Sh. G. See also Kropotkin's Science and Anarchism) . 

Oh, those Anarchists! As the saying goes: "Blame 
others for your own sins." Dialectics matured in the 
struggle against metaphysics and gained fame in this 
struggle; but according to the Anarchists, dialectics is 
metaphysics! 

Dialectics tells us that nothing in the world is eternal, 
everything in the world is transient and mutable; nature 
changes, society changes, habits and customs change, 
conceptions of justice change, truth itself changes — that 
is why dialectics regards everything critically; that is 
why it denies the existence of a once-and-for-all estab- 
lished truth. Consequently, it also repudiates abstract 
"dogmatic propositions, which, once discovered, had 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 307 

merely to be learned by heart" (see F. Engels, Ludwig 
Feuerbach)}'' 

Metaphysics, however, tells us something altogether 
different. From its standpoint the world is something 
eternal and immutable (see F. Engels, Anti-Duhring), 
it has been once and for all determined by someone or 
something — that is why the metaphysicians always have 
"eternal justice" or "immutable truth" on their lips. 

Proudhon, the "father" of the Anarchists, said 
that there existed in the world an immutable justice de- 
termined once and for all, which must be made the basis 
of future society. That is why Proudhon has been called 
a metaphysician. Marx fought Proudhon with the aid 
of the dialectical method and proved that since every- 
thing in the world changes, "justice" must also change, 
and that, consequently, "immutable justice" is meta- 
physical nonsense (see K. Marx, The Poverty of Philos- 
ophy). The Georgian disciples of the metaphysician 
Proudhon, however, keep reiterating that "Marx's dia- 
lectics is metaphysics"! 

Metaphysics recognises various nebulous dogmas, 
such as, for example, the "unknowable," the "thing-in- 
itself," and, in the long run, passes into empty theology. 
In contrast to Proudhon and Spencer, Engels combated 
these dogmas with the aid of the dialectical method 
(see Ludwig Feuerbach); but the Anarchists — the disci- 
ples of Proudhon and Spencer — tell us that Proudhon 
and Spencer were scientists, whereas Marx and Engels 
were metaphysicians! 

One of two things: either the Anarchists are deceiv- 
ing themselves, or else they do not know what they are 
talking about. 



308 J. V. STALIN 



At all events, it is beyond doubt that the Anarchists 
confuse Hegel's metaphysical system with his dialectical 
method. 

Needless to say, Hegel's philosophical system, which 
rests on the immutable idea, is from beginning to end 
metaphysical. But it is also clear that Hegel's dialectical 
method, which repudiates all immutable ideas, is from 
beginning to end scientific and revolutionary. 

That is why Karl Marx, who subjected Hegel's met- 
aphysical system to devastating criticism, at the same 
time praised his dialectical method, which, as Marx 
said, "lets nothing impose upon it, and is in its essence 
critical and revolutionary" (see Capital, Vol. I. Preface). 

That is why Engels sees a big difference between 
Hegel's method and his system. "Whoever placed the 
chief emphasis on the Hegelian system could be fairly 
conservative in both spheres; whoever regarded the 
dialectical method as the main thing could belong to the 
most extreme opposition, both in politics and religion" 
(see Ludwig Feuerbach). 

The Anarchists fail to see this difference and thought- 
lessly maintain that "dialectics is metaphysics." 

To proceed. The Anarchists say that the dialectical 
method is "subtle word-weaving," "the method of 
sophistry," "logical somersaults" (see Nobati, No. 8. Sh. G.), 
"with the aid of which both truth and falsehood are 
proved with equal facility" (see Nobati, No. 4. Article 
by V. Cherkezishvili). 

Thus, in the opinion of the Anarchists, the dialecti- 
cal method proves both truth and falsehood. 

At first sight it would seem that the accusation ad- 
vanced by the Anarchists has some foundation. Listen, 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 309 

for example, to what Engels says about the follower 
of the metaphysical method: 

". . . His communication is: 'Yea, yea; nay, nay, 
for whatsoever is more than these cometh of evil.' For 
him a thing either exists, or it does not exist; it is equal- 
ly impossible for a thing to be itself and at the same 
time something else. Positive and negative absolutely 
exclude one another . . ." (see Anti-Duhring. Intro- 
duction). 

How is that? — the Anarchists cry heatedly. Is it 
possible for a thing to be good and bad at the same time?! 
That is "sophistry," "juggling with words," it shows 
that "you want to prove truth and falsehood with equal 
facility"! . . . 

Let us, however, go into the substance of the matter. 

Today we are demanding a democratic republic. 
Can we say that a democratic republic is good in all 
respects, or bad in all respects? No we cannot! Why? 
Because a democratic republic is good only in one respect: 
when it destroys the feudal system; but it is bad in an- 
other respect: when it strengthens the bourgeois system. 
Hence we say: in so far as the democratic republic destroys 
the feudal system it is good — and we fight for it; but in 
so far as it strengthens the bourgeois system it is bad — 
and we fight against it. 

So the same democratic republic can be "good" and 
"bad" at the same time — it is "yes" and "no." 

The same thing may be said about the eight-hour 
day, which is good and bad at the same time: "good" 
in so far as it strengthens the proletariat, and "bad" in 
so far as it strengthens the wage system. 

It was facts of this kind that Engels had in mind 



310 J. V. STALIN 



when he characterised the dialectical method in the 
words we quoted above. 

The Anarchists, however, fail to understand this, and 
an absolutely clear idea seems to them to be nebulous 
"sophistry." 

The Anarchists are, of course, at liberty to note or 
ignore these facts, they may even ignore the sand on the 
sandy seashore — they have every right to do that. But 
why drag in the dialectical method, which, unlike anarch- 
ism, does not look at life with its eyes shut, which has 
its finger on the pulse of life and openly says: since life 
changes and is in motion, every phenomenon of life has 
two trends: a positive and a negative; the first we must 
defend, the second we must reject. 

To proceed further. In the opinion of our Anarchists, 
"dialectical development is catastrophic development, 
by means of which, first the past is utterly destroyed, 
and then the future is established quite separately. . . . 
Cuvier's cataclysms were due to unknown causes, but 
Marx and Engels's catastrophes are engendered by 
dialectics" (see Nobati, No. 8. Sh. G.). 

In another place the same author writes: "Marx- 
ism rests on Darwinism and treats it uncritically" 
(see Nobati, No. 6). 

Now listen! 

Cuvier rejects Darwin's theory of evolution, he rec- 
ognises only cataclysms, and cataclysms are unexpect- 
ed upheavals "due to unknown causes." The Anarchists 
say that the Marxists adhere to Cuvier' s view and there- 
fore repudiate Darwinism. 

Darwin rejects Cuvier's cataclysms, he recognises 
gradual evolution. But the same Anarchists say that 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 311 

"Marxism rests on Darwinism and treats it uncritically," 
i.e., the Marxists repudiate Cuvier's cataclysms. 

In short, the Anarchists accuse the Marxists of ad- 
hering to Cuvier's view and at the same time reproach 
them for adhering to Darwin's and not to Cuvier's view. 

This is anarchy if you like! As the saying goes: 
the Sergeant's widow flogged herself! Clearly, Sh. G. 
of No. 8 oiNobati forgot what Sh. G. of No. 6 said. 

Which is right: No. 8 or No. 6? 

Let us turn to the facts. Marx says: 

"At a certain stage of their development, the material 
productive forces of society come in conflict with the 
existing relations of production, or — what is but a legal 
expression for the same thing — with the property rela- 
tions. . . . Then begins an epoch of social revolution." 
But "no social order ever perishes before all the pro- 
ductive forces for which there is room in it have devel- 
oped . . ." (see K. Marx, A Contribution to the Critique 
of Political Economy. Preface).**^ 

If this thesis of Marx is applied to modern social 
life, we shall find that between the present-day produc- 
tive forces, which are social in character, and the form of 
appropriation of the product, which is private in char- 
acter, there is a fundamental conflict which must culmi- 
nate in the socialist revolution (see F. Engels, Anti- 
Diihring, Part III, Chapter II). 

As you see, in the opinion of Marx and Engels, revo- 
lution is engendered not by Cuvier's "unknown causes," 
but by very definite and vital social causes called "the 
development of the productive forces." 

As you see, in the opinion of Marx and Engels, rev- 
olution comes only when the productive forces have 



312 J. V. STALIN 



sufficiently matured, and not unexpectedly, as Cuvier 
thought. 

Clearly, there is nothing in common between Cuvier 's 
cataclysms and Marx's dialectical method. 

On the other hand, Darwinism repudiates not only 
Cuvier's cataclysms, but also dialectically understood 
development, which includes revolution; whereas, from 
the standpoint of the dialectical method, evolution and 
revolution, quantitative and qualitative changes, are 
two essential forms of the same motion. 

Obviously, it is also wrong to assert that "Marx- 
ism . . . treats Darwinism uncritically." 

It turns out therefore, that Nobati is wrong in both 
cases, in No. 6 as well as in No. 8. 

Lastly, the Anarchists tell us reproachfully that 
"dialectics . . . provides no possibility of getting, or 
jumping, out of oneself, or of jumping over oneself (see 
Nobati, No. 8. Sh. G.). 

Now that is the downright truth. Messieurs Anarch- 
ists! Here you are absolutely right, my dear sirs: the 
dialectical method does not, indeed, provide such a 
possibility. But why not? Because "jumping out of 
oneself, or jumping over oneself is an exercise for wild 
goats, while the dialectical method was created for 
human beings. 

That is the secret! . . . 

Such, in general, are the Anarchists' views on the 
dialectical method. 

Clearly, the Anarchists fail to understand the dialec- 
tical method of Marx and Engels; they have conjured up 
their own dialectics, and it is against this dialectics 
that they are fighting so ruthlessly. 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 313 

All we can do is to laugh as we gaze at this spectacle, 
for one cannot help laughing when one sees a man fight- 
ing his own imagination, smashing his own inventions, 
while at the same time heatedly asserting that he is 
smashing his opponent. 

II 

THE MATERIALIST THEORY 

"It is not the consciousness of men 
that determines their being, but, on 
the contrary, their social being that 
determines their consciousness. " 

Karl Marx 

We already know what the dialectical method is. 

What is the materialist theory? 

Everything in the world changes, everything in 
life develops, but how do these changes take place and 
in what form does this development proceed? 

We know, for example, that the earth was once an 
incandescent, fiery mass; then it gradually cooled, plants 
and animals appeared, the development of the animal 
kingdom was followed by the appearance of a certain 
species of ape, and all this was followed by the ap- 
pearance of man. 

This, broadly speaking, is the way nature developed. 

We also know that social life did not remain static 
either. There was a time when men lived on a primi- 
tive-communist basis; at that time they gained their 
livelihood by primitive hunting; they roamed through 
the forests and procured their food in that way. There 
came a time when primitive communism was superseded 



314 J. V. STALIN 



by the matriarchate — at that time men satisfied their 
needs mainly by means of primitive agriculture. Later 
the matriarchate was superseded by the patriarchate, 
under which men gained their livelihood mainly by cattle- 
breeding. The patriarchate was later superseded by the 
slave-owning system — at that time men gained their 
livelihood by means of relatively more developed agri- 
culture. The slave-owning system was followed by feu- 
dalism, and then, after all this, came the bourgeois system. 

That, broadly speaking, is the way social life devel- 
oped. 

Yes, all this is well known. . . . But how did this 
development take place; did consciousness call forth 
the development of "nature" and of "society," or, on the 
contrary, did the development of "nature" and "society" 
call forth the development of consciousness? 

This is how the materialist theory presents the ques- 
tion. 

Some people say that "nature" and "social life" were 
preceded by the universal idea, which subsequently 
served as the basis of their development, so that the 
development of the phenomena of "nature" and of 
"social life" is, so to speak, the external form, merely the 
expression of the development of the universal idea. 

Such, for example, was the doctrine of the idealists, 
who in the course of time split up into several trends. 

Others say that from the very beginning there have 
existed in the world two mutually negating forces — 
idea and matter, consciousness and being, and that 
correspondingly, phenomena also fall into two cate- 
gories — the ideal and the material, which negate each 
other, and contend against each other, so that the devel- 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 315 

opment of nature and society is a constant struggle 
between ideal and material phenomena. 

Such, for example, was the doctrine of the dualists, 
who in the course of time, like the idealists, split up into 
several trends. 

The materialist theory utterly repudiates both dual- 
ism and idealism. 

Of course, both ideal and material phenomena exist 
in the world, but this does not mean that they negate each 
other. On the contrary, the ideal and the material sides 
are two different forms of one and the same nature or 
society, the one cannot be conceived without the other, 
they exist together, develop together, and, consequently, 
we have no grounds whatever for thinking that they 
negate each other. 

Thus, so-called dualism proves to be unsound. 

A single and indivisible nature expressed in two 
different forms — material and ideal; a single and indivis- 
ible social life expressed in two different forms — mate- 
rial and ideal — that is how we should regard the develop- 
ment of nature and of social life. 

Such is the monism of the materialist theory. 

At the same time, the materialist theory also repu- 
diates idealism. 

It is wrong to think that in its development the ideal 
side, and consciousness in general, precedes the develop- 
ment of the material side. So-called external "non-liv- 
ing" nature existed before there were any living beings. 
The first living matter possessed no consciousness, it 
possessed only irritability and the first rudiments oi sensa- 
tion. Later, animals gradually developed the power of 
sensation, which slowly passed into consciousness, in 



316 J. V. STALIN 



conformity with the development of the structure of their 
organisms and nervous systems. If the ape had always 
walked on all fours, if it had never stood upright, its 
descendant — man — would not have been able freely to 
use his lungs and vocal chords and, therefore, would 
not have been able to speak; and that would have funda- 
mentally retarded the development of his consciousness. 
If, furthermore, the ape had not risen up on its hind 
legs, its descendant — man — would have been compelled 
always to walk on all fours, to look downwards and 
obtain his impressions only from there; he would have 
been unable to look up and around himself and, con- 
sequently, his brain would have obtained no more im- 
pressions than the brain of a quadruped. All this would 
have fundamentally retarded the development of human 
consciousness. 

It follows, therefore, that the development of con- 
sciousness needs a particular structure of the organism 
and development of its nervous system. 

It follows, therefore, that the development of the 
ideal side, the development of consciousness, is pre- 
ceded by the development of the material side, the de- 
velopment of the external conditions: first the external 
conditions change, first the material side changes, and 
then consciousness, the ideal side, changes accordingly. 

Thus, the history of the development of nature 
utterly refutes so-called idealism. 

The same thing must be said about the history of 
the development of human society. 

History shows that if at different times men were 
imbued with different ideas and desires, the reason for 
this is that at different times men fought nature in dif- 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 317 

ferent ways to satisfy their needs and, accordingly, their 
economic relations assumed different forms. There was 
a time when men fought nature collectively, on the 
basis of primitive communism; at that time their prop- 
erty was communist property and, therefore, at that 
time they drew scarcely any distinction between "mine" 
and "thine," their consciousness was communistic. There 
came a time when the distinction between "mine" and 
"thine" penetrated the process of production; at that 
time property, too, assumed a private, individualist 
character and, therefore, the consciousness of men be- 
came imbued with the sense of private property. Then 
came the time, the present time, when production is again 
assuming a social character and, consequently, property, 
too, will soon assume a social character — and this is pre- 
cisely why the consciousness of men is gradually becom- 
ing imbued with socialism. 

Here is a simple illustration. Let us take a shoemaker 
who owned a tiny workshop, but who, unable to with- 
stand the competition of the big manufacturers, closed 
his workshop and took a job, say, at Adelkhanov's shoe 
factory in Tiflis. He went to work at Adelkhanov's 
factory not with the view to becoming a permanent 
wage-worker, but with the object of saving up some 
money, of accumulating a little capital to enable him to 
reopen his workshop. As you see, the position of this 
shoemaker is already proletarian, but his consciousness 
is still non-proletarian, it is thoroughly petty-bourgeois. 
In other words, this shoemaker has already lost his petty- 
bourgeois position, it has gone, but his petty-bourgeois 
consciousness has not yet gone, it has lagged behind his 
actual position. 



318 J. V. STALIN 



Clearly, here too, in social life, first the external con- 
ditions change, first the conditions of men change and 
then their consciousness changes accordingly. 

But let us return to our shoemaker. As we already 
know, he intends to save up some money and then reopen 
his workshop. This proletarianised shoemaker goes on 
working, but finds that it is a very difficult matter to save 
money, because what he earns barely suffices to maintain 
an existence. Moreover, he realises that the opening 
of a private workshop is after all not so alluring: the 
rent he will have to pay for the premises, the caprices 
of customers, shortage of money, the competition of 
the big manufacturers and similar worries — such are 
the many troubles that torment the private workshop 
owner. On the other hand, the proletarian is relatively 
freer from such cares; he is not troubled by customers, 
or by having to pay rent for premises. He goes to the 
factory every morning, "calmly" goes home in the 
evening, and as calmly pockets his "pay" on Satur- 
days. Here, for the first time, the wings of our shoe- 
maker's petty-bourgeois dreams are clipped; here for 
the first time proletarian strivings awaken in his 
soul. 

Time passes and our shoemaker sees that he has 
not enough money to satisfy his most essential needs, 
that what he needs very badly is a rise in wages. At the 
same time, he hears his fellow-workers talking about 
unions and strikes. Here our shoemaker realises that in 
order to improve his conditions he must fight the masters 
and not open a workshop of his own. He joins the union, 
enters the strike movement, and soon becomes imbued 
with socialist ideas. . . . 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 319 

Thus, in the long run, the change in the shoemaker's 
material conditions was followed by a change in his 
consciousness: first his material conditions changed, 
and then, after a time, his consciousness changed accord- 
ingly. 

The same must be said about classes and about 
society as a whole. 

In social life, too, first the external conditions 
change, first the material conditions change, and then the 
ideas of men, their habits, customs and their world 
outlook change accordingly. 

That is why Marx says: 

"It is not the consciousness of men that determines 
their being, but, on the contrary, their social being that 
determines their consciousness." 

If we can call the material side, the external condi- 
tions, being, and other phenomena of the same kind, 
the content, then we can call the ideal side, consciousness 
and other phenomena of the same kind, the /orm. Hence 
arose the well-known materialist proposition: in the proc- 
ess of development content precedes form, form lags be- 
hind content. 

And as, in Marx's opinion, economic development 
is the "material foundation" of social life, its content, 
while legal-political and religious-philosophical develop- 
ment is the "ideological form" of this content, its 
"superstructure," Marx draws the conclusion that: "With 
the change of the economic foundation the entire immense 
superstructure is more or less rapidly transformed." 

This, of course, does not mean that in Marx's opin- 
ion content is possible without form, as Sh. G. imagines 
(see Noboati, No. 1. "A Critique of Monism"). Content 



320 J. V. STALIN 



is impossible without form, but the point is that since 
a given form lags behind its content, it never fully cor- 
responds to this content; and so the new content is 
"obliged" to clothe itself for a time in the old form, and 
this causes a conflict between them. At the present time, 
for example, the form of appropriation of the product, 
which is private in character, does not correspond to the 
social content of production, and this is the basis of the 
present-day social "conflict." 

On the other hand, the idea that consciousness is 
a form of being does not mean that by its nature con- 
sciousness, too, is matter. That was the opinion held only 
by the vulgar materialists (for example, Biichner and 
Moleschott), whose theories fundamentally contradict 
Marx's materialism, and whom Engels rightly ridiculed 
in his Ludwig Feuerbach. According to Marx's mate- 
rialism, consciousness and being, idea and matter, are 
two different forms of the same phenomenon, which, 
broadly speaking, is called nature, or society. Conse- 
quently, they do not negate each other*; nor are they 
one and the same phenomenon. The only point is that, 
in the development of nature and society, consciousness, 
i.e., what takes place in our heads, is preceded by a cor- 
responding material change, i.e., what takes place outside 
of us; any given material change is, sooner or later, 
inevitably followed by a corresponding ideal change. 

Very well, we shall be told, perhaps this is true as 



* This does not contradict the idea that there is a conflict 
between form and content. The point is that the conflict is not 
between content and form in general, but between the old form 
and the new content, which is seeking a new form and is striving 
towards it. 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 321 

applied to the history of nature and society. But how 
do different conceptions and ideas arise in our heads 
at the present time? Do so-called external conditions 
really exist, or is it only our conceptions of these 
external conditions that exist? And if external condi- 
tions exist, to what degree are they perceptible and 
cognizable? 

On this point the materialist theory says that our 
conceptions, our "self," exist only in so far as external 
conditions exist that give rise to impressions in our 
"self." Whoever unthinkingly says that nothing exists 
but our conceptions, is compelled to deny the existence 
of all external conditions and, consequently, must deny 
the existence of all other people and admit the existence 
only of his own "self," which is absurd, and utterly 
contradicts the principles of science. 

Obviously, external conditions do actually exist; 
these conditions existed before us, and will exist after 
us; and the more often and the more strongly they affect 
our consciousness, the more easily perceptible and cogni- 
zable do they become. 

As regards the question as to how different concep- 
tions and ideas arise in our heads at the present time, 
we must observe that here we have a repetition in brief 
of what takes place in the history of nature and society. 
In this case, too, the object outside of us preceded our 
conception of it; in this case, too, our conception, the 
form, lags behind the object — behind its content. When 
I look at a tree and see it — that only shows that this 
tree existed even before the conception of a tree arose in 
my head, that it was this tree that aroused the correspond- 
ing conception in my head. . . . 



322 J. V. STALIN 



Such, in brief, is the content of Marx's materialist 
theory. 

The importance of the materialist theory for the 
practical activities of mankind can be readily under- 
stood. 

If the economic conditions change first and the con- 
sciousness of men undergoes a corresponding change later, 
it is clear that we must seek the grounds for a given ideal 
not in the minds of men, not in their imaginations, but 
in the development of their economic conditions. Only 
that ideal is good and acceptable which is based on a 
study of economic conditions. All those ideals which 
ignore economic conditions and are not based upon their 
development are useless and unacceptable. 

Such is the first practical conclusion to be drawn 
from the materialist theory. 

If the consciousness of men, their habits and customs, 
are determined by external conditions, if the unsuitability 
of legal and political forms rests on an economic content, 
it is clear that we must help to bring about a radical 
change in economic relations in order, with this change, 
to bring about a radical change in the habits and cus- 
toms of the people, and in their political system. 

Here is what Karl Marx says on that score: 

"No great acumen is required to perceive the neces- 
sary interconnection of materialism with . . . social- 
ism. If man constructs all his knowledge, perceptions, 
etc., from the world of sense . . . then it follows that 
it is a question of so arranging the empirical world 
that he experiences the truly human in it, that he be- 
comes accustomed to experiencing himself as a human 
being. ... If man is unfree in the materialist sense — that 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 323 

is, is free not by reason of the negative force of being 
able to avoid this or that, but by reason of the positive 
power to assert his true individuality, then one should 
not punish individuals for crimes, but rather destroy 
the anti-social breeding places of crime. ... If man is 
moulded circumstances, then the circumstances 
must be moulded humanly" (see Ludwig Feuerbach, 
Appendix: "Karl Marx on the History of French Mate- 
rialism of the XVIII Century").**** 

Such is the second practical conclusion to be drawn 
from the materialist theory. 



What is the anarchist view of the materialist theory 
of Marx and Engels? 

While the dialectical method originated with Hegel, 
the materialist theory is a further development of the 
materialism of Feuerbach. The Anarchists know this 
very well, and they try to take advantage of the defects 
of Hegel and Feuerbach to discredit the dialectical 
materialism of Marx and Engels. We have already 
shown with reference to Hegel and the dialectical method 
that these tricks of the Anarchists prove nothing but 
their own ignorance. The same must be said with refer- 
ence to their attacks on Feuerbach and the materialist 
theory. 

For example. The Anarchists tell us with great 
aplomb that "Feuerbach was a pantheist . . ." that he 
"deified man . . ." (see Nobati, No. 7. D. Delendi), 
that "in Feuerbach's opinion man is what he eats . . ." 
alleging that from this Marx drew the following con- 
clusion: "Consequently, the main and primary thing 



324 J. V. STALIN 



is economic conditions . . ." (see Nobati, No. 6, 
Sh. G.). 

True, nobody has any doubts about Feuerbach's 
pantheism, his deification of man, and other errors 
of his of the same kind. On the contrary, Marx and 
Engels were the first to reveal Feuerbach's errors. 
Nevertheless, the Anarchists deem it necessary once 
again to "expose" the already exposed errors. Why? 
Probably because, in reviling Feuerbach, they want 
indirectly to discredit the materialist theory of Marx 
and Engels. Of course, if we examine the subject impar- 
tially we shall certainly find that in addition to erroneous 
ideas, Feuerbach gave utterance to correct ideas, as has 
been the case with many scholars in history. Neverthe- 
less, the Anarchists go on "exposing." . . . 

We say again that by tricks of this kind they prove 
nothing but their own ignorance. 

It is interesting to note (as we shall see later on) 
that the Anarchists took it into their heads to criti- 
cise the materialist theory from hearsay, without any 
acquaintance with it. As a consequence, they often 
contradict and refute each other, which, of course, 
makes our "critics" look ridiculous. If, for example, 
we listen to what Mr. Cherkezishvili has to say, it 
would appear that Marx and Engels detested monistic 
materialism, that their materialism was vulgar and not 
monistic materialism: 

"The great science of the naturalists, with its system 
of evolution, transformism and monistic materialism, 
which Engels so heartily detested . . . avoided dialec- 
tics," etc. (see Nobati, No. 4. V. Cherkezishvili). 

It follows, therefore, that natural-scientific mate- 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 325 

rialism, which Cherkezishvili approves of and which 
Engels "detested," was monistic materialism and, there- 
fore, deserves approval, whereas the materialism of Marx 
and Engels is not monistic and, of course, does not 
deserve recognition. 

Another Anarchist, however, says that the material- 
ism of Marx and Engels is monistic and therefore should 
be rejected. 

"Marx's conception of history is a throwback to 
Hegel. The monistic materialism of absolute objectivism 
in general, and Marx's economic monism in particular, 
are impossible in nature and fallacious in theory. . . . 
Monistic materialism is poorly disguised dualism and 
a compromise between metaphysics and science ..." 
(see Nobati, No. 6. Sh. G.). 

It would follow, therefore, that monistic materialism 
is unacceptable, that Marx and Engels do not detest it, 
but, on the contrary, are themselves monistic material- 
ists — and therefore, monistic materialism must be rejected. 

They are all at sixes and sevens. Try and make out 
which of them is right, the former or the latter! They 
have not yet agreed among themselves about the merits 
and demerits of Marx's materialism, they have not yet 
understood whether it is monistic or not, and have not 
yet made up their minds themselves as to which is the 
more acceptable, vulgar or monistic materialism — but 
they already deafen us with their boastful claims to have 
shattered Marxism! 

Well, well, if Messieurs the Anarchists continue 
to shatter each other's views as zealously as they are 
doing now, we need say no more, the future belongs 
to the Anarchists. . . . 



326 J. V. STALIN 



No less ridiculous is the fact that certain "celeblat- 
ed" Anarchists, notwithstanding their "celebrity," have 
not yet made themselves familiar with the different 
trends in science. It appears that they are ignorant of 
the fact that there are various kinds of materialism in 
science which differ a great deal from each other: there 
is, for example, vulgar materialism, which denies the 
importance of the ideal side and the effect it has upon 
the material side; but there is also so-called monistic 
materialism — the materialist theory of Marx — which 
scientifically examines the interrelation between the 
ideal and the material sides. But the Anarchists confuse 
these different kinds of materialism, fail to see even the 
obvious differences between them, and at the same time 
affirm with great aplomb that they are regenerating 
science! 

P. Kropotkin, for example, smugly asserts in his 
"philosophical" works that anarcho-communism rests 
on "contemporary materialist philosophy," but he does 
not utter a single word to explain on which "material- 
ist philosophy" anarcho-communism rests: on vulgar, 
monistic, or some other. Evidently he is ignorant of the 
fact that there are fundamental contradictions between 
the different trends of materialism, and he fails to under- 
stand that to confuse these trends means not "regenerat- 
ing science," but displaying one's own downright igno- 
rance (see Kropotkin, Science and Anarchism, and also 
Anarchy and Its Philosophy). 

The same thing must be said about Kropotkin's 
Georgian disciples. Listen to this: 

"In the opinion of Engels, and also of Kautsky, 
Marx rendered mankind a great service in that he. . ." 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 327 

among other things, discovered the "materialist concep- 
tion. Is this true? We do not think so, for we know . . . 
that all the historians, scientists and philosophers who 
adhere to the view that the social mechanism is set in 
motion by geographic, climatic and telluric, cosmic, 
anthropological and biological conditions — are all ma- 
terialists'' (see Nobati, No. 2). 

It follows, therefore, that there is no difference what- 
ever between the "materialism" of Aristotle and Holbach, 
or between the "materialism" of Marx and Moleschott! 
This is criticism if you like! And people whose knowl- 
edge is on such a level have taken it into their heads 
to renovate science! Indeed, it is an apt saying: "It's 
a bad lookout when a cobbler begins to bake pies! . . ." 

To proceed. Our "celebrated" Anarchists heard some- 
where that Marx's materialism was a "belly theory," and 
so they rebuke us, Marxists, saying: 

"In the opinion of Feuerbach, man is what he eats. 
This formula had a magic effect on Marx and Engels," 
and, as a consequence, Marx drew the conclusion that 
"the main and primary thing is economic conditions, 
relations of production. . . ." And then the Anarchists 
proceed to instruct us in a philosophical tone: "It would 
be a mistake to say that the sole means of achiev- 
ing this object of social life) is eating and economic 
production. ... If ideology were determined mainly, 
monistically, by eating and economic conditions — then 
some gluttons would be geniuses" (see Nobati, No. 6. 
Sh. G.). 

You see how easy it is to refute the materialism of 
Marx and Engels! It is sufficient to hear some gossip 
in the street from some schoolgirl about Marx and 



328 J. V. STALIN 



Engels, it is sufficient to repeat that street gossip with 
philosophical aplomb in the columns of a paper like 
Nobati, to leap into fame as a "critic" of Marxism! 

But tell me, gentlemen: Where, when, on which planet, 
and which Marx did you hear say that ""eating determines 
ideology''! Why did you not cite a single sentence, a 
single word from the works of Marx to back your asser- 
tion? True, Marx said that the economic conditions of men 
determine their consciousness, their ideology, but who 
told you that eating and economic conditions are the 
same thing? Don't you really know that physiological 
phenomena, such as eating, for example, differ fundamen- 
tally from sociological phenomena, such as the economic 
conditions of men, for example? One can forgive a 
schoolgirl, say, for confusing these two different phenom- 
ena; but how is it that you, the "vanquishers of Social- 
Democracy," "regenerators of science," so carelessly re- 
peat the mistake of a schoolgirl? 

How, indeed, can eating determine social ideology? 
Ponder over what you yourselves have said: eating, the 
form of eating, does not change; in ancient times people 
ate, masticated and digested their food in the same way as 
they do now, but ideology changes all the time. Ancient, 
feudal, bourgeois and proletarian — such are the forms 
of ideology. Is it conceivable that that which does not 
change can determine that which is constantly changing? 

To proceed further. In the opinion of the Anarchists, 
Marx's materialism "is parallelism. . . ." Or again: "mo- 
nistic materialism is poorly disguised dualism and a 
compromise between metaphysics and science. . . ." 
"Marx drops into dualism because he depicts relations of 
production as material, and human striving and will as 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 329 

an illusion and a Utopia, which, even though it exists, 
is of no importance'' (see Nobati, No. 6. Sh. G.). 

Firstly, Marx's monistic materialism has nothing 
in common with silly parallelism. From the standpoint 
of this materialism, the material side, content, necessari- 
ly precedes the ideal side, form. Parallelism, however, 
repudiates this view and emphatically affirms that neither 
the material nor the ideal comes first, that both develop 
together, side by side. 

Secondly, even if Marx had in fact "depicted relations 
of production as material, and human striving and will 
as an illusion and a Utopia having no importance," does 
that mean that Marx was a dualist? The dualist, as 
is well known, ascribes equal importance to the ideal 
and material sides as two opposite principles. But if, 
as you say, Marx attaches higher importance to the 
material side and no importance to the ideal side because 
it is a "utopia," how do you make out that Marx was 
a dualist. Messieurs "Critics"? 

Thirdly, what connection can there be between ma- 
terialist monism and dualism, when even a child knows 
that monism springs from one principle — nature, or be- 
ing, which has a material and an ideal form, whereas 
dualism springs from two principles — the material and 
the ideal, which, according to dualism, negate each other? 

Fourthly, when did Marx depict "human striving 
and will as a utopia and an illusion"? True, Marx explained 
"human striving and will" by economic development, 
and when the strivings of certain armchair philos- 
ophers failed to harmonise with economic conditions 
he called them Utopian. But does this mean that Marx 
believed that human striving in general is Utopian? Does 



330 J. V. STALIN 



this, too, really need explanation? Have you really not 
read Marx's statement that: ''mankind always sets itself 
only such tasks as it can solve" (see Preface to A Contri- 
bution to the Critique of Political Economy), i.e., that, 
generally speaking, mankind does not pursue Utopian 
aims? Clearly, either our "critic" does not know what 
he is talking about, or he is deliberately distorting the 
facts. 

Fifthly, who told you that in the opinion of Marx and 
Engels "human striving and will are of no importance"? 
Why do you not point to the place where they say that? 
Does not Marx speak of the importance of "striving 
and will" in his Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, 
in his Class Struggles in France, in his Civil War in 
France, and in other pamphlets of the same kind? Why 
then did Marx try to develop the proletarians' "will 
and striving" in the socialist spirit, why did he conduct 
propaganda among them if he attached no importance 
to "striving and will"? Or, what did Engels talk about 
in his well-known articles of 1891-94 if not the "impor- 
tance of will and striving"? True, in Marx's opinion 
human "will and striving" acquire their content from 
economic conditions, but does that mean that they them- 
selves exert no influence on the development of econom- 
ic relations? Is it really so difficult for the Anarchists to 
understand such a simple idea? 

Here is another "accusation" Messieurs the Anarchists 
make: "form is inconceivable without content . . ." there- 
fore, one cannot say that "form comes after content 
(lags behind content. K.) . . . they 'co-exist.'. . . Other- 
wise, monism would be an absurdity" (see Nobati, No. 1. 
Sh. G.). 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 331 

Our "scholar" is somewhat confused again. It is 
quite true that content is inconceivable without form. 
But it is also true that the existing form never fully cor- 
responds to the existing content: the former lags behind 
the latter, to a certain extent the new content is always 
clothed in the old form and, as a consequence, there 
is always a conflict between the old form and the new 
content. It is precisely on this ground that revolutions 
occur, and this, among other things, expresses the rev- 
olutionary spirit of Marx's materialism. The "celebrated" 
Anarchists, however, have failed to understand this, 
and for this they themselves and not the materialist 
theory are to blame, of course. 

Such are the views of the Anarchists on the materi- 
alist theory of Marx and Engels, that is, if they can be 
called views at all. 

Ill 
PROLETARIAN SOCIALISM 

We are now familiar with Marx's theoretical doc- 
trine; we are familiar with his method and also with his 
theory. 

What practical conclusions must we draw from this 
doctrine? 

What connection is there between dialectical mate- 
rialism and proletarian socialism? 

The dialectical method affirms that only that class 
which is growing day by day, which always marches 
forward and fights unceasingly for a better future, can be 
progressive to the end, only that class can smash the yoke 
of slavery. We see that the only class which is steadily 



332 J. V. STALIN 



growing, which always marches forward and is fighting for 
the future is the urban and rural proletariat. Therefore, 
we must serve the proletariat and place our hopes on it. 

Such is the first practical conclusion to be drawn 
from Marx's theoretical doctrine. 

But there is service and service. Bernstein also "serves" 
the proletariat when he urges it to forget about socialism. 
Kropotkin also "serves" the proletariat when he offers 
it community "socialism," which is scattered and has 
no broad industrial base. And Karl Marx serves the pro- 
letariat when he calls it to proletarian socialism, which 
will rest on the broad basis of modern large-scale industry. 

What must we do in order that our activities may 
benefit the proletariat? How should we serve the pro- 
letariat? 

The materialist theory affirms that a given ideal 
may be of direct service to the proletariat only if it does 
not run counter to the economic development of the 
country, if it fully answers to the requirements of that 
development. The economic development of the capi- 
talist system shows that present-day production is as- 
suming a social character, that the social character of 
production is a fundamental negation of existing capital- 
ist property; consequently, our main task is to help to 
abolish capitalist property and to establish socialist 
property. And that means that the doctrine of Bernstein, 
who urges that socialism should be forgotten, fundamen- 
tally contradicts the requirements of economic develop- 
ment — it is harmful to the proletariat. 

Further, the economic development of the capitalist 
system shows that present-day production is expanding 
day by day; it is not confined within the limits of 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 333 

individual towns and provinces, but constantly overflows 
these limits and embraces the territory of the whole 
state — consequently, we must welcome the expansion of 
production and regard as the basis of future socialism not 
separate towns and communities, but the entire and indi- 
visible territory of the whole state which, in future, will, 
of course, expand more and more. And this means that the 
doctrine advocated by Kropotkin, which confines future 
socialism within the limits of separate towns and com- 
munities, is contrary to the interests of a powerful expan- 
sion of production — it is harmful to the proletariat. 

Fight for a broad socialist life as the principal goal — 
this is how we should serve the proletariat. 

Such is the second practical conclusion to be drawn 
from Marx's theoretical doctrine. 

Clearly, proletarian socialism is the logical deduction 
from dialectical materialism. 

What is proletarian socialism? 

The present system is a capitalist system. This means 
that the world is divided up into two opposing camps, 
the camp of a small handful of capitalists and the camp 
of the majority — the proletarians. The proletarians work 
day and night, nevertheless they remain poor. The capi- 
talists do not work, nevertheless they are rich. This 
takes place not because the proletarians are unintelligent 
and the capitalists are geniuses, but because the capital- 
ists appropriate the fruits of the labour of the proletar- 
ians, because the capitalists exploit the proletarians. 

Why are the fruits of the labour of the proletarians 
appropriated by the capitalists and not by the prole- 
tarians? Why do the capitalists exploit the proletarians 
and not vice versa? 



334 J. V. STALIN 



Because the capitalist system is based on commodity 
production: here everything assumes the form of a com- 
modity, everywhere the principle of buying and selling 
prevails. Here you can buy not only articles of consump- 
tion, not only food products, but also the labour power 
of men, their blood and their consciences. The capital- 
ists know all this and purchase the labour power of the 
proletarians, they hire them. This means that the capi- 
talists become the owners of the labour power they buy. 
The proletarians, however, lose their right to the labour 
power which they have sold. That is to say, what is pro- 
duced by that labour power no longer belongs to the 
proletarians, it belongs only to the capitalists and goes 
into their pockets. The labour power which you have 
sold may produce in the course of a day goods to the value 
of 100 rubles, but that is not your business, those goods 
do not belong to you, it is the business only of the capi- 
talists, and the goods belong to them — all that you are 
due to receive is your daily wage which, perhaps, may be 
sufficient to satisfy your essential needs if, of course, you 
live frugally. Briefly: the capitalists buy the labour pow- 
er of the proletarians, they hire the proletarians, and 
this is precisely why the capitalists appropriate the fruits 
of the labour of the proletarians, this is precisely why 
the capitalists exploit the proletarians and not vice versa. 

But why is it precisely the capitalists who buy the 
labour power of the proletarians? Why do the capitalists 
hire the proletarians and not vice versa? 

Because the principal basis of the capitalist system 
is the private ownership of the instruments and means 
of production. Because the factories, mills, the land and 
minerals, the forests, the railways, machines and other 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 335 

means of production have become the private property 
of a small handful of capitalists. Because the proletarians 
lack all this. That is why the capitalists hire proletarians 
to keep the factories and mills going — if they did not 
do that their instruments and means of production would 
yield no profit. That is why the proletarians sell their 
labour power to the capitalists — if they did not, they 
would die of starvation. 

All this throws light on the general character of 
capitalist production. Firstly, it is self-evident that 
capitalist production cannot be united and organised: 
it is all split up among the private enterprises of indi- 
vidual capitalists. Secondly, it is also clear that the 
immediate purpose of this scattered production is not to 
satisfy the needs of the people, but to produce goods for 
sale in order to increase the profits of the capitalists. 
But as every capitalist strives to increase his profits, 
each one tries to produce the largest possible quantity 
of goods and, as a result, the market is soon glutted, 
prices fall and — a general crisis sets in. 

Thus, crises, unemployment, suspension of produc- 
tion, anarchy of production, and the like, are the direct 
results of present-day unorganised capitalist production. 

If this unorganised social system still remains stand- 
ing, if it still firmly withstands the attacks of the pro- 
letariat, it is primarily because it is protected by the 
capitalist state, by the capitalist government. 

Such is the basis of present-day capitalist society. 



There can be no doubt that future society will be 
built on an entirely different basis. 



336 J. V. STALIN 



Future society will be socialist society. This means 
primarily, that there will be no classes in that society; 
there will be neither capitalists nor proletarians and, con- 
sequently, there will be no exploitation. In that society 
there will be only workers engaged in collective labour. 

Future society will be socialist society. This means 
also that, with the abolition of exploitation commodity 
production and buying and selling will also be abolished 
and, therefore, there will be no room for buyers and 
sellers of labour power, for employers and employed — 
there will be only free workers. 

Future society will be socialist society. This means, 
lastly, that in that society the abolition of wage-labour 
will be accompanied by the complete abolition of the 
private ownership of the instruments and means of pro- 
duction; there will be neither poor proletarians nor rich 
capitalists — there will be only workers who collectively 
own all the land and minerals, all the forests, all the 
factories and mills, all the railways, etc. 

As you see, the main purpose of production in the 
future will be to satisfy the needs of society and not 
to produce goods for sale in order to increase the profits 
of the capitalists. Where there will be no room for commod- 
ity production, struggle for profits, etc. 

It is also clear that future production will be social- 
istically organised, highly developed production, which 
will take into account the needs of society and will 
produce as much as society needs. Here there will be 
no room whether for scattered production, competition, 
crises, or unemployment. 

Where there are no classes, where there are neither 
rich nor poor, there is no need for a state, there is no 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 337 

need either for political power, which oppresses the poor 
and protects the rich. Consequently, in socialist society 
there will be no need for the existence of political 
power. 

That is why Karl Marx said as far back as 1846: 

"The working class in the course of its development 
Will substitute for the old bourgeois society an association 
which will exclude classes and their antagonism, and 
there will be no more political power properly so-called . . ." 
(see The Poverty of Philosophy). ^'^ 

That is why Engels said in 1884: 

"The state, then, has not existed from all eternity. 
There have been societies that did without it, that had 
no conception of the state and state power. At a certain 
stage of economic development, which was necessarily 
bound up with the cleavage of society into classes, the 
state became a necessity. . . . We are now rapidly ap- 
proaching a stage in the development of production at 
which the existence of these classes not only will have 
ceased to be a necessity, but will become a positive 
hindrance to production. They will fall as inevitably 
as they arose at an earlier stage. Along with them the 
state will inevitably fall. The society that will organise 
production on the basis of a free and equal association 
of the producers will put the whole machinery of state 
where it will then belong: into the Museum of Antiqui- 
ties, by the side of the spinning wheel and the bronze 
axe" (see The Origin of the Family, Private Property 
and the State).'^^ 

At the same time, it is self-evident that for the pur- 
pose of administering public affairs there will have to 
be in socialist society, in addition to local offices which 



338 J. V. STALIN 



will collect all sorts of information, a central statistical 
bureau, which will collect information about the needs 
of the whole of society, and then distribute the various 
kinds of work among the working people accordingly. 
It will also be necessary to hold conferences, and par- 
ticularly congresses, the decisions of which will certainly 
be binding upon the comrades in the minority until the 
next congress is held. 

Lastly, it is obvious that free and comradely labour 
should result in an equally comradely, and complete, 
satisfaction of all needs in the future socialist society. 
This means that if future society demands from each of 
its members as much labour as he can perform, it, in 
its turn, must provide each member with all the pro- 
ducts he needs. From each according to his ability, 
to each according to his needs! — such is the basis upon 
which the future coUectivist system must be created. 
It goes without saying that in the first stage of social- 
ism, when elements who have not yet grown accustomed 
to work are being drawn into the new way of life, when 
the productive forces also will not yet have been suffi- 
ciently developed and there will still be "dirty" and 
"clean" work to do, the application of the principle: 
"to each according to his needs," will undoubtedly 
be greatly hindered and, as a consequence, society 
will be obliged temporarily to take some other path, a 
middle path. But it is also clear that when future society 
runs into its groove, when the survivals of capitalism 
will have been eradicated, the only principle that will 
conform to socialist society will be the one pointed 
out above. 

That is why Marx said in 1875: 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 339 

"In a higher phase of communist (i.e., socialist) 
society, after the enslaving subordination of the indi- 
vidual to the division of labour, and therewith also the 
antithesis between mental and physical labour, has 
vanished; after labour has become not only a means of 
livelihood but life's prime want; after the productive 
forces have also increased with the all-round develop- 
ment of the individual . . . only then can the narrow 
horizon of bourgeois law be crossed in its entirety and 
society inscribe on its banners: 'From each according 
to his ability, to each according to his needs'" (see 
Critique of the Gotha Programme). '^^ 

Such, in general, is the picture of future socialist 
society according to the theory of Marx. 

This is all very well. But is the achievement of 
socialism conceivable? Can we assume that man will rid 
himself of his "savage habits"? 

Or again: if everybody receives according to his 
needs, can we assume that the level of the productive 
forces of socialist society will be adequate for this? 

Socialist society presupposes an adequate develop- 
ment of productive forces and socialist consciousness 
among men, their socialist enlightenment. At the pres- 
ent time the development of productive forces is hindered 
by the existence of capitalist property, but if we bear 
in mind that this capitalist property will not exist in 
future society, it is self-evident that the productive forces 
will increase tenfold. Nor must it be forgotten that in 
future society the hundreds of thousands of present-day 
parasites, and also the unemployed, will set to work 
and augment the ranks of the working people; and 
this will greatly stimulate the development of the 



340 J. V. STALIN 



productive forces. As regards men's "savage" sentiments 
and opinions, these are not as eternal as some people imag- 
ine; there was a time, under primitive communism, when 
man did not recognise private property; there came a 
time, the time of individualistic production, when private 
property dominated the hearts and minds of men; a new 
time is coming, the time of socialist production — will 
it be surprising if the hearts and minds of men become 
imbued with socialist strivings? Does not being deter- 
mine the "sentiments" and opinions of men? 

But what proof is there that the establishment of 
the socialist system is inevitable? Must the development 
of modern capitalism inevitably be followed by social- 
ism? Or, in other words: How do we know that Marx's 
proletarian socialism is not merely a sentimental dream, 
a fantasy? Where is the scientific proof that it is not? 

History shows that the form of property is directly 
determined by the form of production and, as a conse- 
quence, a change in the form of production is sooner 
or later inevitably followed by a change in the form of 
property. There was a time when property bore a com- 
munistic character, when the forests and fields in which 
primitive men roamed belonged to all and not to indi- 
viduals. Why did communist property exist at that time? 
Because production was communistic, labour was per- 
formed in common, collectively — all worked together and 
could not dispense with each other. A different period set 
in, the period of petty-bourgeois production, when prop- 
erty assumed an individualistic (private) character, when 
everything that man needed (with the exception, of 
course, of air, sunlight, etc.) was regarded as private prop- 
erty. Why did this change take place? Because produc- 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 341 

tion became individualistic; each one began to work for 
himself, stuck in his own little corner. Finally there came 
a time, the time of large-scale capitalist production, when 
hundreds and thousands of workers gather under one 
roof, in one factory, and engage in collective labour. 
Here you do not see the old method of working indivi- 
dually, each pulling his own way — here every worker 
is closely associated in his work with his comrades in 
his own shop, and all of them are associated with the 
other shops. It is sufficient for one shop to stop work 
for the workers in the entire plant to become idle. As 
you see, the process of production, labour, has already 
assumed a social character, has acquired a socialist hue. 
And this takes place not only in individual factories, 
but in entire branches of industry, and between branches 
of industry; it is sufficient for the railwaymen to go on 
strike for production to be put in difficulties, it is 
sufficient for the production of oil and coal to come to a 
standstill for whole factories and mills to close down 
after a time. Clearly, here the process of production has 
assumed a social, collective character. As, however, the 
private character of appropriation does not correspond to 
the social character of production, as present-day collec- 
tive labour must inevitably lead to collective property, 
it is self-evident that the socialist system will follow 
capitalism as inevitably as day follows night. 

That is how history proves the inevitability of Marx's 
proletarian socialism. 



History teaches us that the class or social group 
which plays the principal role in social production and 



342 J. V. STALIN 



performs the main functions in production must, in the 
course of time, inevitably take control of that production. 
There was a time, under the matriarchate, when women 
were regarded as the masters of production. Why was 
this? Because under the kind of production then pre- 
vailing, primitive agriculture, women played the prin- 
cipal role in production, they performed the main func- 
tions, while the men roamed the forests in quest of game. 
Then came the time, under the patriarchate, when the 
predominant position in production passed to men. Why 
did this change take place? Because under the kind of 
production prevailing at that time, stock-raising, in 
which the principal instruments of production were the 
spear, the lasso and the bow and arrow, the principal 
role was played by men. . . . There came the time of 
large-scale capitalist production, in which the prole- 
tarians begin to play the principal role in production, 
when all the principal functions in production pass to 
them, when without them production cannot go on for 
a single day (let us recall general strikes), and when 
the capitalists, far from being needed for production, 
are even a hindrance to it. What does this signify? It 
signifies either that all social life must collapse en- 
tirely, or that the proletariat, sooner or later, but inev- 
itably, must take control of modern production, must 
become its sole owner, its socialistic owner. 

Modern industrial crises, which sound the death 
knell of capitalist property and bluntly put the ques- 
tion: capitalism or socialism, make this conclusion 
absolutely obvious; they vividly reveal the parasitism of 
the capitalists and the inevitability of the victory of 
socialism. 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 343 

That is how history further proves the inevitability 
of Marx's proletarian socialism. 

Proletarian socialism is based not on sentiment, 
not on abstract "justice," not on love for the proletariat, 
but on the scientific grounds referred to above. 

That is why proletarian socialism is also called 
"scientific socialism." 

Engels said as far back as 1877: 

"If for the imminent overthrow of the present mode 
of distribution of the products of labour ... we had 
no better guarantee than the consciousness that this 
mode of distribution is unjust, and that justice must 
eventually triumph, we should be in a pretty bad way, 
and we might have a long time to wait. . . ." The most 
important thing in this is that "the productive forces 
created by the modern capitalist mode of production 
and the system of distribution of goods established 
by it have come into crying contradiction with that 
mode of production itself, and in fact to such a degree 
that, if the whole of modern society is not to perish, a 
revolution of the mode of production and distribu- 
tion must take place, a revolution which will put an 
end to all class divisions. On this tangible, material 
fact . . . and not on the conceptions of justice and 
injustice held by any armchair philosopher, is modern 
socialism's confidence of victory founded" (see Anti- 
Diihring).'^^ 

That does not mean, of course, that since capitalism 
is decaying the socialist system can be established any 
time we like. Only Anarchists and other petty-bourgeois 
ideologists think that. The socialist ideal is not the 
ideal of all classes. It is the ideal only of the proletariat; 



344 J. V. STALIN 



not all classes are directly interested in its fulfilment 
the proletariat alone is so interested. This means that 
as long as the proletariat constitutes a small section 
of society the establishment of the socialist system is 
impossible. The decay of the old form of production, 
the further concentration of capitalist production, and the 
proletarianisation of the majority in society — such are 
the conditions needed for the achievement of socialism. 
But this is still not enough. The majority in society 
may already be proletarianised, but socialism may still 
not be achievable. This is because, in addition to all 
this, the achievement of socialism calls for class con- 
sciousness, the unity of the proletariat and the ability 
of the proletariat to manage its own affairs. In order 
that all this may be acquired, what is called political 
freedom is needed, i.e., freedom of speech, press, strikes 
and association, in short, freedom to wage the class 
struggle. But political freedom is not equally ensured 
everywhere. Therefore, the conditions under which it is 
obliged to wage the struggle: under a feudal autocracy 
(Russia), a constitutional monarchy (Germany), a big- 
bourgeois republic (France), or under a democratic re- 
public (which Russian Social-Democracy is demanding), 
are not a matter of indifference to the proletariat. Po- 
litical freedom is best and most fully ensured in a demo- 
cratic republic, that is, of course, in so far as it can be 
ensured under capitalism at all. Therefore, all advocates 
of proletarian socialism necessarily strive for the estab- 
lishment of a democratic republic as the best "bridge" 
to socialism. 

That is why, under present conditions, the Marxist 
programme is divided into two parts: the maximum pro- 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 345 

gramme, the goal of which is socialism, and the minimum 
programme, the object of which is to lay the road to social- 
ism through a democratic republic. 



What must the proletariat do, what path must it 
take in order consciously to carry out its programme, 
to overthrow capitalism and build socialism? 

The answer is clear: the proletariat cannot achieve 
socialism by making peace with the bourgeoisie — it must 
unfailingly take the path of struggle, and this struggle 
must be a class struggle, a struggle of the entire proletar- 
iat against the entire bourgeoisie. Either the bourgeoisie 
and its capitalism, or the proletariat and its socialism! 
That must be the basis of the proletariat's actions, of its 
class struggle. 

But the proletarian class struggle assumes numerous 
forms. A strike, for example — whether partial or general 
makes no difference — is class struggle. Boycott and sabo- 
tage are undoubtedly class struggle. Meetings, demonstra- 
tions, activity in public representative bodies, etc. — wheth- 
er national parliaments or local government bodies makes 
no difference — are also class struggle. All these are dif- 
ferent forms of the same class struggle. We shall not here 
examine which form of struggle is more important for the 
proletariat in its class struggle, we shall merely observe 
that, in its proper time and place, each is undoubtedly 
needed by the proletariat as essential means for developing 
its class consciousness and organisation; and the proletar- 
iat needs class consciousness and organisation as much as 
it needs air. It must also be observed, however, that for 
the proletariat, all these forms of struggle are merely 



346 J. V. STALIN 



preparatory means, that not one of them, taken separately, 
constitutes the decisive means by which the proletariat can 
smash capitalism. Capitalism cannot be smashed by the 
general strike alone: the general strike can only create 
some of the conditions that are necessary for the smash- 
ing of capitalism. It is inconceivable that the proletar- 
iat should be able to overthrow capitalism merely by its 
activity in parliament: parliamentarism can only prepare 
some of the conditions that are necessary for overthrow- 
ing capitalism. 

What, then, is the decisive means by which the pro- 
letariat will overthrow the capitalist system? 

The socialist revolution is this means. 

Strikes, boycott, parliamentarism, meetings and dem- 
onstrations are all good forms of struggle as means for 
preparing and organising the proletariat. But not one 
of these means is capable of abolishing existing inequal- 
ity. All these means must be concentrated in one prin- 
cipal and decisive means; the proletariat must rise and 
launch a determined attack upon the bourgeoisie in order 
to destroy capitalism to its foundations. This principal 
and decisive means is the socialist revolution. 

The socialist revolution must not be conceived as 
a sudden and short blow, it is a prolonged struggle 
waged by the proletarian masses, who inflict defeat upon 
the bourgeoisie and capture its positions. And as the 
victory of the proletariat will at the same time mean 
domination over the vanquished bourgeoisie, as, in a 
collision of classes, the defeat of one class signifies the 
domination of the other, the first stage of the socialist 
revolution will be the political domination of the prole- 
tariat over the bourgeoisie. 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 347 

The socialist dictatorship of the proletariat, capture 
of power by the proletariat — this is what the socialist 
revolution must start with. 

This means that until the bourgeoisie is completely 
vanquished, until its wealth has been confiscated, the 
proletariat must without fail possess a military force, it 
must without fail have its "proletarian guard," with 
the aid of which it will repel the counter-revolutionary 
attacks of the dying bourgeoisie, exactly as the Paris 
proletariat did during the Commune. 

The socialist dictatorship of the proletariat is needed 
to enable the proletariat to expropriate the bourgeoisie, 
to enable it to confiscate the land, forests, factories and 
mills, machines, railways, etc., from the entire bour- 
geoisie. 

The expropriation of the bourgeoisie — this is what 
the socialist revolution must lead to. 

This, then, is the principal and decisive means by 
which the proletariat will overthrow the present capi- 
talist system. 

That is why Karl Marx said as far back as 1847: 

". . . The first step in the revolution by the working 
class, is to raise the proletariat to the position of ruling 
class. . . . The proletariat will use its political suprema- 
cy to wrest, by degrees, all capital from the bourgeoisie, 
to centralise all instruments of production in the 
hands ... of the proletariat organised as the ruling 
class . . ." (see the Communist Manifesto). 

That is how the proletariat must proceed if it wants 
to bring about socialism. 

From this general principle emerge all the other 
views on tactics. Strikes, boycott, demonstrations, and 



348 J. V. STALIN 



parliamentarism are important only in so far as they 
help to organise the proletariat and to strengthen and 
enlarge its organisations for accomplishing the socialist 
revolution. 



Thus, to bring about socialism, the socialist revolu- 
tion is needed, and the socialist revolution must begin 
with the dictatorship of the proletariat, i.e., the prole- 
tariat must capture political power as a means with 
which to expropriate the bourgeoisie. 

But to achieve all this the proletariat must be organ- 
ised, the proletarian ranks must be closely-knit and 
united, strong proletarian organisations must be formed, 
and these must steadily grow. 

What forms must the proletarian organisations as- 
sume? 

The most widespread, mass organisations are trade 
unions and workers' co-operatives (mainly producers' and 
consumers' co-operatives). The object of the trade unions 
is to fight (mainly) against industrial capital to improve 
the conditions of the workers within the limits of the 
present capitalist system. The object of the co-oper- 
atives is to fight (mainly) against merchant capital 
to secure an increase of consumption among the workers 
by reducing the prices of articles of prime necessity, 
also within the limits of the capitalist system, of course. 
The proletariat undoubtedly needs both trade unions 
and co-operatives as means of organising the prole- 
tarian masses. Hence, from the point of view of the prole- 
tarian socialism of Marx and Engels, the proletariat must 
utilise both these forms of organisation and reinforce and 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 349 

Strengthen them, as far as this is possible under present 
political conditions, of course. 

But trade unions and co-operatives alone cannot 
satisfy the organisational needs of the militant prole- 
tariat. This is because the organisations mentioned 
cannot go beyond the limits of capitalism, for their object 
is to improve the conditions of the workers under the 
capitalist system. The workers, however, want to free 
themselves entirely from capitalist slavery, they want 
to smash these limits, and not merely operate within 
the limits of capitalism. Hence, in addition, an organisa- 
tion is needed that will rally around itself the class-con- 
scious elements of the workers of all trades, that will 
transform the proletariat into a conscious class and make 
it its chief aim to smash the capitalist system, to prepare 
for the socialist revolution. 

Such an organisation is the Social-Democratic Party 
of the proletariat. 

This Party must be a class party, and it must be 
quite independent of other parties — and this is because 
it is the party of the proletarian class, the emancipa- 
tion of which can be brought about only by this class 
itself. 

This Party must be a revolutionary party — and this 
because the workers can be emancipated only by revo- 
lutionary means, by means of the socialist revolu- 
tion. 

This Party must be an international party, the doors 
of the Party must be open to all class-conscious 
proletarians — and this because the emancipation of 
the workers is not a national but a social question, 
equally important for the Georgian proletarians, for the 



350 J. V. STALIN 



Russian proletarians, and for the proletarians of other 
nations. 

Hence, it is clear, that the more closely the prole- 
tarians of the different nations are united, the more 
thoroughly the national barriers which have been raised 
between them are demolished, the stronger will the Party 
of the proletariat be, and the more will the organisation 
of the proletariat in one indivisible class be facilitated. 

Hence, it is necessary, as far as possible, to intro- 
duce the principle of centralism in the proletarian organ- 
isations as against the looseness of federation — irre- 
spective of whether these organisations are party, trade 
union or co-operative. 

It is also clear that all these organisations must be 
built on a democratic basis, in so far as this is not hin- 
dered by political or other conditions, of course. 

What should be the relations between the Party on the 
one hand and the co-operatives and trade unions on 
the other? Should the latter be party or non-party? 
The answer to this question depends upon where and un- 
der what conditions the proletariat has to fight. At all 
events, there can be no doubt that the friendlier the trade 
unions and co-operatives are towards the socialist party 
of the proletariat, the more fully will both develop. 
And this is because both these economic organisations, if 
they are not closely connected with a strong socialist 
party, often become petty, allow narrow craft interests 
to obscure general class interests and thereby cause great 
harm to the proletariat. It is therefore necessary, in all 
cases, to ensure that the trade unions and co-operatives 
are under the ideological and political influence of 
the Party. Only if this is done will the organisations 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 351 

mentioned be transformed into a socialist school that 
will organise the proletariat — at present split up into 
separate groups — into a conscious class. 

Such, in general, are the characteristic features of 
the proletarian socialism of Marx and Engels. 



How do the Anarchists look upon proletarian so- 
cialism? 

First of all we must know that proletarian socialism 
is not simply a philosophical doctrine. It is the doctrine 
of the proletarian masses, their banner; it is honoured 
and "revered" by the proletarians all over the world. 
Consequently, Marx and Engels are not simply the 
founders of a philosophical "school" — they are the liv- 
ing leaders of the living proletarian movement, which 
is growing and gaining strength every day. Whoever 
fights against this doctrine, whoever wants to "over- 
throw" it, must keep all this well in mind so as to avoid 
having his head cracked for nothing in an unequal 
struggle. Messieurs the Anarchists are well aware of this. 
That is why, in fighting Marx and Engels, they resort 
to a most unusual and, in its way, a new weapon. 

What is this new weapon? A new investigation of 
capitalist production? A refutation of Marx's Capitall 
Of course not! Or perhaps, having armed themselves 
with "new facts" and the "inductive" method, they 
"scientifically" refute the "Bible" of Social-Democracy — 
the Communist Manifesto of Marx and Engels? Again no! 
Then what is this extraordinary weapon? 

It is the accusation that Marx and Engels indulged 
in "plagiarism"! Would you believe it? It appears that 



352 J. V. STALIN 



Marx and Engels wrote nothing original, that scientific 
socialism is a pure fiction, because the Communist Mani- 
festo of Marx and Engels was, from beginning to end, 
"stolen" from the Manifesto of Victor Considerant. This 
is quite ludicrous, of course, but V. Cherkezishvili, 
the "incomparable leader" of the Anarchists, relates this 
amusing story with such aplomb, and a certain Pierre 
Ramus, Cherkezishvili 's foolish "apostle," and our home- 
grown Anarchists repeat this "discovery" with such 
fervour, that it is worth while dealing at least briefly 
with this "story." 

Listen to Cherkezishvili: 

"The entire theoretical part of the Communist Mani- 
festo, namely, the first and second chapters . . . are 
taken from V. Considerant. Consequently, the Manifesto 
of Marx and Engels — that Bible of legal revolutionary 
democracy — is nothing but a clumsy paraphrasing of 
V. Considerant's Manifesto. Marx and Engels not only 
appropriated the contents of Considerant's Manifesto but 
even . . . borrowed some of its chapter headings" (see 
the symposium of articles by Cherkezishvili, Ramus and 
Labriola, published in German under the title of 
The Origin of the ""Communist Manifesto,'" p. 10). 

This story is repeated by another Anarchist, P. Ra- 
mus: 

"It can be emphatically asserted that their (Marx- 
Engels's) major work (the Communist Manifesto) is simply 
theft (a plagiary), shameless theft; they did not, however, 
copy it word for word as ordinary thieves do, but stole 
only the ideas and theories . . ." {ibid., p. 4). 

This is repeated by our Anarchists in Nobati, Musha,"^^ 
Khma,'^'* and other papers. 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 353 

Thus it appears that scientific socialism and its 
theoretical principles were "stolen" from Considerant's 
Manifesto. 

Are there any grounds for this assertion? 

What was V. Considerant? 

What was Karl Marx? 

V. Considerant, who died in 1893, was a disciple of 
the Utopian Fourier and remained an incorrigible Uto- 
pian, who placed his hopes for the "salvation of France" 
on the conciliation of classes. 

Karl Marx, who died in 1883, was a material- 
ist, an enemy of the Utopians. He regarded the develop- 
ment of the productive forces and the struggle between 
classes as the guarantee of the liberation of man- 
kind. 

Is there anything in common between them? 

The theoretical basis of scientific socialism is the ma- 
terialist theory of Marx and Engels. From the stand- 
point of this theory the development of social life is 
wholly determined by the development of the productive 
forces. If the feudal-landlord system was superseded by 
the bourgeois system, the "blame" for this rests upon 
the development of the productive forces, which made 
the rise of the bourgeois system inevitable. Or again: 
if the present bourgeois system will inevitably be su- 
perseded by the socialist system, it is because this is 
called for by the development of the modern productive 
forces. Hence the historical necessity of the destruction 
of capitalism and the establishment of socialism. Hence 
the Marxist proposition that we must seek our ideals in 
the history, of the development of the productive forces 
and not in the minds of men. 



354 J. V. STALIN 



Such is the theoretical basis of the Communist 
Manifesto of Marx and Engels (see the Communist Mani- 
festo, Chapters I and II). 

Does V. Considerant's Democratic Manifesto 
say anything of the kind? Did Considerant accept the 
materialist point of view? 

We assert that neither Cherkezishvili, nor Ramus, nor 
our Nobatists quote a single statement, or a single word 
from Considerant's Democratic Manifesto which would 
confirm that Considerant was a materialist and based the 
evolution of social life upon the development of the 
productive forces. On the contrary, we know very well 
that Considerant is known in the history of socialism 
as an idealist Utopian (see Paul Louis, The History of 
Socialism in France). 

What, then, induces these queer "critics" to indulge 
in this idle chatter? Why do they undertake to criti- 
cise Marx and Engels when they are even unable to dis- 
tinguish idealism from materialism? Is it only to amuse 
people? . . . 

The tactical basis of scientific socialism is the doc- 
trine of uncompromising class struggle, for this is the 
best weapon the proletariat possesses. The proletarian 
class struggle is the weapon by means of which the 
proletariat will capture political power and then 
expropriate the bourgeoisie in order to establish so- 
cialism. 

Such is the tactical basis of scientific socialism as 
expounded in the Manifesto of Marx and Engels. 

Is anything like this said in Considerant's Democrat- 
ic Manifesto! Did Considerant regard the class struggle 
as the best weapon the proletariat possesses? 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 355 

As is evident from the articles of Cherkezishvili 
and Ramus (see the above-mentioned symposium), there 
is not a word about this in Considerant's Manifesto — it 
merely notes the class struggle as a deplorable fact. As 
regards the class struggle as a means of smashing capital- 
ism, Considerant spoke of it in his Manifesto as follows: 

"Capital, labour and talent — such are the three basic 
elements of production, the three sources of wealth, the 
three wheels of the industrial mechanism. . . . The three 
classes which represent them have 'common interests'; 
their function is to make the machines work for the capi- 
talists and for the people. . . . Before them ... is the 
great goal of organising the association of classes within 
the unity of the nation . . ." (see K. Kautsky's pamphlet 
The Communist Manifesto — A Plagiary, p. 14, where this 
passage from Considerant's Manifesto is quoted). 

All classes, unite! — this is the slogan that V. Consid- 
erant proclaimed in his Democratic Manifesto. 

What is there in common between these tactics of 
class conciliation and the tactics of uncompromising class 
struggle advocated by Marx and Engels, whose resolute 
call was: Proletarians of all countries, unite against all 
anti-proletarian classes? 

There is nothing in common between them, of course! 

Why, then, do Messieurs Cherkezishvili and their 
foolish followers talk this rubbish? Do they think we 
are dead? Do they think we shall not drag them into 
the light of day?! 

And lastly, there is one other interesting point. 
V. Considerant lived right up to 1893. He published his 
Democratic Manifesto in 1843. At the end of 1847 Marx 
and Engels wrote their Communist Manifesto. After that 



356 J. V. STALIN 



the Manifesto of Marx and Engels was published over 
and over again in all European languages. Everybody 
knows that the Manifesto of Marx and Engels was an 
epoch-making document. Nevertheless, nowhere did Con- 
siderant or his friends ever state during the lifetime of 
Marx and Engels that the latter had stolen "socialism" 
from Considerant's Manifesto. Is this not strange, 
reader? 

What, then, impels the "inductive" upstarts — I 
beg your pardon, "scholars" — to talk this rubbish? In 
whose name are they speaking? Are they more familiar 
with Considerant's Manifesto than was Considerant him- 
self? Or perhaps they think that V. Considerant and his 
supporters had not read the Communist Manifesto? 

But enough. . . . Enough because the Anarchists 
themselves do not take seriously the Quixotic crusade 
launched by Ramus and Cherkezishvili: the inglorious 
end of this ridiculous crusade is too obvious to make it 
worthy of much attention. . . . 

Let us proceed to the actual criticism. 



The Anarchists suffer from a certain ailment: they 
are very fond of "criticising" the parties of their oppo- 
nents, but they do not take the trouble to make them- 
selves in the least familiar with these parties. We 
have seen the Anarchists behave precisely in this way 
when "criticising" the dialectical method and the ma- 
terialist theory of the Social-Democrats (see Chapters 
I and II). They behave in the same way when they 
deal with the theory of scientific socialism of the 
Social-Democrats. 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 357 

Let us, for example, take the following fact. Who does 
not know that fundamental disagreements exist between 
the Socialist-Revolutionaries and the Social-Democrats? 
Who does not know that the former repudiate Marxism, 
the materialist theory of Marxism, its dialectical method, 
its programme and the class struggle — whereas the Social- 
Democrats take their stand entirely on Marxism? These 
fundamental disagreements must be self-evident to any- 
body who has heard anything, if only with half an ear, 
about the controversy between Revolutsionnaya Rossiya 
(the organ of the Socialist-Revolutionaries) and Iskra 
(the organ of the Social-Democrats). But what will you 
say about those "critics" who fail to see this difference 
between the two and shout that both the Socialist 
Revolutionaries and the Social-Democrats are Marx- 
ists? Thus, for example, the Anarchists assert that both 
Revolutsionnaya Rossiya and Iskra are Marxist organs 
(see the Anarchists' symposium Bread and Freedom, 
p. 202). 

That shows how "familiar" the Anarchists are with 
the principles of Social-Democracy! 

After this, the soundness of their "scientific criticism" 
will be self-evident. . . . 

Let us examine this "criticism." 

The Anarchists' principal "accusation" is that they 
do not regard the Social-Democrats as genuine Social- 
ists — you are not Socialists, you are enemies of social- 
ism, they keep on repeating. 

This is what Kropotkin writes on this score: 

". . . We arrive at conclusions different from those 
arrived at by the majority of the Economists ... of the 
Social-Democratic school. . . . We . . . arrive at free 



358 J. V. STALIN 



communism, whereas the majority of Socialists (meaning 
Social-Democrats too — The Author) arrive at state capi- 
talism and collectivism (see Kropotkin, Modern Science 
and Anarchism, pp. 74-75). 

What is this "state capitalism" and "collectivism" of 
the Social-Democrats? 

This is what Kropotkin writes about it: 

"The German Socialists say that all accumulated 
wealth must be concentrated in the hands of the state, 
which will place it at the disposal of workers' associations, 
organise production and exchange, and control the life 
and work of society" (see Kropotkin, The Speeches of a 
Rebel, p. 64). 

And further: 

"In their schemes . . . the collectivists commit . . . 
a double mistake. They want to abolish the capitalist 
system, but they preserve the two institutions which con- 
stitute the foundations of this system: representative 
government and wage-labour" (see The Conquest of Bread, 
p. 148). . . . "Collectivism, as is well known . . . pre- 
serves . . . wage-labour. Only . . . representative govern- 
ment . . . takes the place of the employer. . . ." The rep- 
resentatives of this government "retain the right to uti- 
lise in the interests of all the surplus value obtained 
from production. Moreover, in this system a distinction 
is made . . . between the labour of the common labourer 
and that of the trained man: the labour of the un- 
skilled worker, in the opinion of the collectivists, is 
simple labour, whereas the skilled craftsman, engineer, 
scientist and so forth perform what Marx calls complex 
labour and have the right to higher wages" {ibid., p. 52). 
Thus, the workers will receive their necessary products 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 359 

not according to their needs, but "in proportion to the 
services they render society" {ibid., p. 157). 

The Georgian Anarchists say the same thing only 
with greater aplomb. Particularly outstanding among 
them for the recklessness of his statements is Mr. Baton. 
He writes: 

"What is the collectivism of the Social-Democrats? 
Collectivism, or more correctly, state capitalism, is 
based on the following principle: each must work as 
much as he likes, or as much as the state determines, 
and receives in reward the value of his labour in the 
shape of goods. . . ." Consequently, here "there is needed 
a legislative assembly . . . there is needed (also) an 
executive power, i.e., ministers, all sorts of adminis- 
trators, gendarmes and spies and, perhaps, also troops, 
if there are too many discontented" (see Nobati, No. 5, 
pp. 68-69). 

Such is the first "accusation" of Messieurs the 
Anarchists against Social-Democracy. 



Thus, from the arguments of the Anarchists it fol- 
lows that: 

1. In the opinion of the Social-Democrats, socialist 
society is impossible without a government which, in the 
capacity of principal master, will hire workers and will 
certainly have "ministers . . . gendarmes and spies." 
2. In socialist society, in the opinion of the Social-Demo- 
crats, the distinction between "dirty" and "clean" work 
will be retained, the principle "to each according to his 
needs" will be rejected, and another principle will prevail, 
viz., "to each according to his services," 



360 J. V. STALIN 



Those are the two points on which the Anarchists' 
"accusation" against Social-Democracy is based. 

Has this "accusation" advanced by Messieurs the 
Anarchists any foundation? 

We assert that everything the Anarchists say on this 
subject is either the result of stupidity, or it is despica- 
ble slander. 

Here are the facts. 

As far back as 1846 Karl Marx said: "The working 
class in the course of its development will substitute for 
the old bourgeois society an association which will ex- 
clude classes and their antagonism, and there will be no 
more political power properly so-called . . ." (see Poverty 
of Philosophy). 

A year later Marx and Engels expressed the same idea 
in the Communist Manifesto (Communist Manifesto, Chap- 
ter II). 

In 1877 Engels wrote: "The first act in which the 
state really comes forward as the representative of society 
as a whole — the taking possession of the means of pro- 
duction in the name of society — is at the same time its 
last independent act as a state. The interference of the 
state power in social relations becomes superfluous in 
one sphere after another, and then ceases of itself. . . . 
The state is not 'abolished,' it withers away" (Anti- 
Diihring). 

In 1884 the same Engels wrote: "The state, then, 
has not existed from all eternity. There have been socie- 
ties that did without it, that had no conception of the 
state. ... At a certain stage of economic development, 
which was necessarily bound up with the cleavage of 
society into classes, the state became a necessity. . . . 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 361 

We are now rapidly approaching a stage in the develop- 
ment of production at which the existence of these classes 
not only will have ceased to be a necessity, but will be- 
come a positive hindrance to production. They will fall 
as inevitably as they arose at an earlier stage. Along with 
them the state will inevitably fall. The society that will 
organise production on the basis of a free and equal 
association of the producers will put the whole machinery 
of state where it will then belong: into the Museum of 
Antiquities, by the side of the spinning wheel and the 
bronze axe" (see Origin of the Family, Private Property and 
the State). 

Engels said the same thing again in 1891 (see his 
Introduction to The Civil War in France). 

As you see, in the opinion of the Social-Democrats, 
socialist society is a society in which there will be no 
room for the so-called state, political power, with its 
ministers, governors, gendarmes, police and soldiers. The 
last stage in the existence of the state will be the period 
of the socialist revolution, when the proletariat will cap- 
ture political power and set up its own government (dicta- 
torship) for the final abolition of the bourgeoisie. But 
when the bourgeoisie is abolished, when classes are abol- 
ished, when socialism becomes firmly established, there 
will be no need for any political power — and the so-called 
state will retire into the sphere of history. 

As you see, the above-mentioned "accusation" of the 
Anarchists is mere tittle-tattle devoid of all foundation. 

As regards the second point in the "accusation," Karl 
Marx says the following about it: 

"In a higher phase of communist (i.e., socialist) society, 
after the enslaving subordination of the individual to the 



362 J. V. STALIN 



division of labour, and therewith also the antithesis be- 
tween mental andphysical labour, has vanished; after labour 
has become . . . life's prime want; after the productive 
forces have also increased with the all-round development 
of the individual . . . only then can the narrow horizon 
of bourgeois law be crossed in its entirety and society in- 
scribe on its banners: 'From each according to his ability, to 
each according to his needs''' (Critique of the Gotha 
Programme). 

As you see, in Marx's opinion, the higher phase of 
communist (i.e., socialist) society will be a system under 
which the division of work into "dirty" and "clean," and 
the contradiction between mental and physical labour 
will be completely abolished, labour will be equal, and in 
society the genuine communist principle will prevail: 
from each according to his ability, to each according to 
his needs. Here there is no room for wage-labour. 

Clearly this "accusation" is also devoid of all foun- 
dation. 

One of two things: either Messieurs the Anarchists 
have never seen the above-mentioned works of Marx and 
Engels and indulge in "criticism" on the basis of hearsay, 
or they are familiar with the above-mentioned works of 
Marx and Engels and are deliberately lying. 

Such is the fate of the first "accusation." 

* * 

* 

The second "accusation" of the Anarchists is that they 
deny that Social-Democracy is revolutionary. You are not 
revolutionaries, you repudiate violent revolution, you 
want to establish socialism only by means of ballot 
papers — Messieurs the Anarchists tell us. 

Listen to this: 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 363 

". . . Social-Democrats . . . are fond of declaiming on 
the theme of 'revolution,' 'revolutionary struggle,' 'fight- 
ing with arms in hand.' . . . But if you, in the simplicity 
of your heart, ask them for arms, they will solemnly hand 
you a ballot paper to vote in elections. . . ." They affirm 
that "the only expedient tactics befitting revolutionaries 
are peaceful and legal parliamentarism, with the oath 
of allegiance to capitalism, to established power and to 
the entire existing bourgeois system" (see symposium 
Bread and Freedom, pp. 21, 22-23). 

The Georgian Anarchists say the same thing, with 
even greater aplomb, of course. Take, for example, Baton, 
who writes: 

"The whole of Social-Democracy . . . openly asserts 
that fighting with the aid of rifles and weapons is a bour- 
geois method of revolution, and that only by means of 
ballot papers, only by means of general elections, can 
parties capture power, and then, by means of a parlia- 
mentary majority and legislation, reorganise society" 
(see The Capture of Political Power, pp. 3-4). 

That is what Messieurs the Anarchists say about the 
Marxists. 

Has this "accusation" any foundation? 

We affirm that here, too, the Anarchists betray their 
ignorance and their passion for slander. 

Here are the facts. 

As far back as the end of 1847, Karl Marx and 
Frederick Engels wrote: 

"The Communists disdain to conceal their views and 
aims. They openly declare that their ends can be obtained 
only by the forcible overthrow of all existing social condi- 
tions. Let the ruling classes tremble at a Communistic 



364 J. V. STALIN 



Revolution. The proletarians have nothing to lose but 
their chains. They have a world to win. Working men of 
all countries, unite!''' (See the Manifesto of the Communist 
Party. In some of the legal editions several words have 
been omitted in the translation.) 

In 1850, in anticipation of another outbreak in Ger- 
many, Karl Marx wrote to the German comrades of that 
time as follows: 

"Arms and ammunition must not be surrendered on 
any pretext . . . the workers must . . . organise themselves 
independently as a proletarian guard with commanders . . . 
and with a general staff. ..." And this "you must keep 
in view during and after the impending insurrection" (see 
The Cologne Trial. Marx's Address to the Communists). ^^ 

In 1851-52 Karl Marx and Frederick Engels wrote: 

". . . The insurrectionary career once entered upon, act 
with the greatest determination, and on the offensive. The 
defensive is the death of every armed rising. . . . Surprise 
your antagonists while their forces are scattering, prepare 
new successes, however small, but daily . . . force your 
enemies to a retreat before they can collect their strength 
against you; in the words of Danton, the greatest master of 
revolutionary policy yet known: de I'audace, de I'audace, 
encore de I'audace!" {Revolution and Counter-revolution 
in Germany.) 

We think that something more than "ballot papers" 
is meant here. 

Lastly, recall the history of the Paris Commune, recall 
how peacefully the Commune acted, when it was content 
with the victory in Paris and refrained from attacking 
Versailles, that hotbed of counter-revolution. What do you 
think Marx said at that time? Did he call upon the Pari- 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 365 

sians to go to the ballot box? Did he express approval of 
the complacency of the Paris workers (the whole of Paris 
was in the hands of the workers), did he approve of the good 
nature they displayed towards the vanquished Versail- 
lese? Listen to what Marx said: 

"What elasticity, what historical initiative, what a 
capacity for sacrifice in these Parisians! After six months 
of hunger . . . they rise, beneath Prussian bayonets. . . . 
History has no like example of like greatness! If they are 
defeated only their 'good nature' will be to blame. They 
should have marched at once on Versailles, after first Vinoy 
and then the reactionary section of the Paris National 
Guard had themselves retreated. They missed their oppor- 
tunity because of conscientious scruples. They did not want 
to start a civil war, as if that mischievous abortion Thiers 
had not already started the civil war with his attempt to 
disarm Paris!" {Letters to Kugelmann.y^ 

That is how Karl Marx and Frederick Engels thought 
and acted. 

That is how the Social-Democrats think and act. 

But the Anarchists go on repeating: Marx and Engels 
and their followers are interested only in ballot papers — 
they repudiate violent revolutionary action! 

As you see, this "accusation" is also slander, which 
exposes the Anarchists' ignorance about the essence of 
Marxism. 

Such is the fate of the second "accusation." 



The third "accusation" of the Anarchists consists in 
denying that Social-Democracy is a popular movement, 
describing the Social-Democrats as bureaucrats, and 



366 J. V. STALIN 



affirming that the Social-Democratic plan for the dictator- 
ship of the proletariat spells death to the revolution, and 
since the Social-Democrats stand for such a dictatorship 
they actually want to establish not the dictatorship of 
the proletariat, but their own dictatorship over the 
proletariat. 

Listen to Mr. Kropotkin: 

"We Anarchists have pronounced final sentence upon 
dictatorship. . . . We know that every dictatorship, no 
matter how honest its intentions, will lead to the death of 
the revolution. We know . . . that the idea of dictatorship 
is nothing more or less than the pernicious product of gov- 
ernmental fetishism which . . . has always striven to per- 
petuate slavery" (see Kropotkin, The Speeches of a Rebel, 
p. 131). The Social-Democrats not only recognise revolu- 
tionary dictatorship, they also "advocate dictatorship over 
the proletariat. . . . The workers are of interest to them 
only in so far as they are a disciplined army under their 
control. . . . Social-Democracy strives through the medi- 
um of the proletariat to capture the state machine" (see 
Bread and Freedom, pp. 62, 63). 

The Georgian Anarchists say the same thing: 

"The dictatorship of the proletariat in the direct sense 
of the term is utterly impossible, because the advocates 
of dictatorship are state men, and their dictatorship will 
be not the free activities of the entire proletariat, but the 
establishment at the head of society of the same represent- 
ative government that exists today" (see Baton, The Cap- 
ture of Political Power, p. 45). The Social-Democrats stand 
for dictatorship not in order to facilitate the emancipation 
of the proletariat, but in order . . . ''by their own rule to 
establish a new slavery" (see Nobati, No. 1, p. 5. Baton). 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 367 

Such is the third "accusation" of Messieurs the 
Anarchists. 

It requires no great effort to expose this, one of the 
regular slanders uttered by the Anarchists with the object 
of deceiving their readers. 

We shall not analyse here the deeply mistaken view 
of Kropotkin, according to whom every dictatorship spells 
death to revolution. We shall discuss this later when we 
discuss the Anarchists' tactics. At present we shall touch 
upon only the "accusation" itself. 

As far back as the end of 1847 Karl Marl and Frederick 
Engels said that to establish socialism the proletariat must 
achieve political dictatorship in order, with the aid of 
this dictatorship, to repel the counter-revolutionary at- 
tacks of the bourgeoisie and to take from it the means 
of production; that this dictatorship must be not the dic- 
tatorship of a few individuals, but the dictatorship of the 
entire proletariat as a class: 

"The proletariat will use its political supremacy to 
wrest, by degrees, all capital from the bourgeoisie, to cen- 
tralise all instruments of production in the hands . . . 
of the proletariat organised as the ruling class . . ." (see 
the Communist Manifesto). 

That is to say, the dictatorship of the proletariat will 
be a dictatorship of the entire proletariat as a class over 
the bourgeoisie and not the domination of a few indi- 
viduals over the proletariat. 

Later they repeated this same idea in nearly all their 
other works, such as, for example. The Eighteenth 
Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, The Class Struggles in 
France, The Civil War in France, Revolution and Counter- 
revolution in Germany, Anti-Diihring, and other works. 



368 J. V. STALIN 



But this is not all; To ascertain how Marx and Engels 
conceived of the dictatorship of the proletariat, to ascer- 
tain to what extent they regarded this dictatorship as 
possible, for all this it is very interesting to know their 
attitude towards the Paris Commune. The point is that 
the dictatorship of the proletariat is denounced not only by 
the Anarchists but also by the urban petty bourgeoisie, in- 
cluding all kinds of butchers and tavern-keepers — by all 
those whom Marx and Engels called philistines. This is 
what Engels said about the dictatorship of the proletar- 
iat, addressing such philistines: 

"Of late, the German philistine has once more been 
filled with wholesome terror at the words: Dictatorship 
of the Proletariat. Well and good, gentlemen, do you want 
to know what this dictatorship looks like? Look at the 
Paris Commune. That was the Dictatorship of the Prole- 
tariat" (see The Civil War in France, Introduction by 
Engels). ''^ 

As you see, Engels conceived of the dictatorship of 
the proletariat in the shape of the Paris Commune. 

Clearly, everybody who wants to know what the dicta- 
torship of the proletariat is as conceived of by Marxists 
must study the Paris Commune. Let us then turn to the 
Paris Commune. If it turns out that the Paris Commune 
was indeed the dictatorship of a few individuals over the 
proletariat, then — down with Marxism, down with the 
dictatorship of the proletariat! But if we find that 
the Paris Commune was indeed the dictatorship of the 
proletariat over the bourgeoisie, then . . . we shall laugh 
heartily at the anarchist slanderers who in their struggle 
against the Marxists have no alternative but to invent 
slander. 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 369 

The history of the Paris Commune can be divided into 
two periods: the first period, when affairs in Paris were 
controlled by the well-known "Central Committee," and 
the second period, when, after the authority of the "Central 
Committee" had expired, control of affairs was trans- 
ferred to the recently elected Commune. What was this 
"Central Committee," what was its composition? Before 
us lies Arthur Arnould's Popular History of the Paris 
Commune which, according to Arnould, briefly answers 
this question. The struggle had only just commenced when 
about 300,000 Paris workers, organised in companies and 
battalions, elected delegates from their ranks. In this 
way the "Central Committee" was formed. 

"All these citizens (members of the "Central Commit- 
tee") elected during partial elections by their companies 
or battalions," says Arnould, "were known only to the 
small groups whose delegates they were. Who were these 
people, what kind of people were they, and what did they 
want to do?" This was "an anonymous government con- 
sisting almost exclusively of common workers and minor 
office employees, the names of three fourths of whom were 
unknown outside their streets or offices. . . . Tradition 
was upset. Something unexpected had happened in the 
world. There was not a single member of the ruling classes 
among them. A revolution had broken out which was not 
represented by a single lawyer, deputy, journalist or general. 
Instead, there was a miner from Creusot, a bookbinder, 
a cook, and so forth" (see A Popular History of the Paris 
Commune, p. 107). 

Arthur Arnould goes on to say: 

"The members of the 'Central Committee' said: 'We 
are obscure bodies, humble tools of the attacked 



370 J. V. STALIN 



people. . . . Instruments of the people's will, we are here to 
be its echo, to achieve its triumph. The people want a Com- 
mune, and we shall remain in order to proceed to the elec- 
tion of the Commune.' Neither more nor less. These dicta- 
tors do not put themselves above nor stand aloof from the 
masses. One feels that they are living with the masses, 
in the masses, by means of the masses, that they consult 
with them every second, that they listen and convey all 
they hear, striving only, in a concise form ... to convey 
the opinion of three hundred thousand men" {ibid., p. 109). 

That is how the Paris Commune behaved in the first 
period of its existence. 

Such was the Paris Commune. 

Such is the dictatorship of the proletariat. 

Let us now pass to the second period of the Commune, 
when the Commune functioned in place of the "Central 
Committee." Speaking of these two periods, which lasted 
two months, Arnould exclaims with enthusiasm that this 
was a real dictatorship of the people. Listen: 

"The magnificent spectacle which this people presented 
during those two months imbues us with strength and 
hope ... to look into the face of the future. During those 
two months there was a real dictatorship in Paris, a most 
complete and uncontested dictatorship not of one man, but 
of the entire people — the sole master of the situation. . . . 
This dictatorship lasted uninterruptedly for over two 
months, from March 18 to May 22 (1871). . . ." In itself 
". . . the Commune was only a moral power and pos- 
sessed no other material strength than the universal 
sympathy ... of the citizens, the people were the rulers, 
the only rulers, they themselves set up their police and 
magistracy . . ." {ibid., pp. 242, 244). 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM 371 

That is how the Paris Commune is described by Arthur 
Arnould, a member of the Commune and an active par- 
ticipant in its hand-to-hand fighting. 

The Paris Commune is described in the same way by 
another of its members and equally active participant 
Lissagaray (see his History of the Paris Commune). 

The people as the "only rulers," "not the dictatorship 
of one man, but of the whole people" — this is what the 
Paris Commune was. 

"Look at the Paris Commune. That was the dictator- 
ship of the proletariat" — exclaimed Engels for the infor- 
mation of Philistines. 

So this is the dictatorship of the proletariat as con- 
ceived of by Marx and Engels. 

As you see, Messieurs the Anarchists know as much 
about the dictatorship of the proletariat, the Paris Com- 
mune, and Marxism, which they so often "criticise," 
as you and I, dear reader, know about the Chinese lan- 
guage. 

Clearly, there are two kinds of dictatorship. There is 
the dictatorship of the minority, the dictatorship of a 
small group, the dictatorship of the Trepovs and Igna- 
tyevs, which is directed against the people. This kind of 
dictatorship is usually headed by a camarilla which 
adopts secret decisions and tightens the noose around the 
neck of the majority of the people. 

Marxists are the enemies of such a dictatorship, and 
they fight such a dictatorship far more stubbornly and 
self-sacrificingly than do our noisy Anarchists. 

There is another kind of dictatorship, the dictatorship 
of the proletarian majority, the dictatorship of the masses, 
which is directed against the bourgeoisie, against the 



372 J. V. STALIN 



minority. At the head of this dictatorship stand the 
masses; here there is no room either for a camarilla or for 
secret decisions, here everything is done openly, in the 
streets, at meetings — because it is the dictatorship of the 
street, of the masses, a dictatorship directed against all 
oppressors. 

Marxists support this kind of dictatorship "with both 
hands" — and that is because such a dictatorship is the 
magnificent beginning of the great socialist revolution. 

Messieurs the Anarchists confused these two mutually 
negating dictatorships and thereby put themselves in a 
ridiculous position: they are fighting not Marxism but the 
figments of their own imagination, they are fighting not 
Marx and Engels but windmills, as Don Quixote of blessed 
memory did in his day. . . . 

Such is the fate of the third "accusation." 

(TO BE CONTINUED)* 

Akhali Droyeba {New Times), 

Nos. 5, 6, 7 and 8, 

December 11, 18,-25, 1906 

and January 1, 1907 

Chveni Tskhovreha (Our Life), 

Nos. 3, 5, 8 and 9, 

February 21, 23, 27 and 28, 1907 

Dro (Time) Nos. 21, 22, 23 and 26, 

April 4, 5, 6 and 10, 1907 



Signed: Ko. . . . 

Translated from the Georgian 



* The continuation did not appear in the press because, in the 
middle of 1907, Comrade Stalin was transferred by the Central 
Committee of the Party to Baku for Party work, and several 
months later he was arrested there. His notes on the last chapters 
of his work Anarchism or Socialism? were lost when the police 
searched his lodgings. — Ed. 



APPENDIX 



ANARCHISM OR SOCIALISM? 

DIALECTICAL MATERIALISM 
I 

We are not the kind of people who, when the word "anarchism" 
is mentioned, turn away contemptuously and say with a supercil- 
ious wave of the hand: "Why waste time on that, it's not worth 
talking about!" We think that such cheap "criticism" is undig- 
nified and useless. 

Nor are we the kind of people who console themselves with 
the thought that the Anarchists "have no masses behind them 
and, therefore, are not so dangerous." It is not who has a larger 
or smaller "mass" following today, but the essence of the doctrine 
that matters. If the "doctrine" of the Anarchists expresses the 
truth, then it goes without saying that it will certainly hew a path 
for itself and will rally the masses around itself. If, however, it 
is unsound and built up on a false foundation, it will not last 
long and will remain suspended in mid-air. But the unsoundness 
of anarchism must be proved. 

We believe that the Anarchists are real enemies of Marxism. 

Accordingly, we also hold that a real struggle must be waged 

against real enemies. Therefore, it is necessary to examine the 

"doctrine" of the Anarchists from beginning to end and weigh it 

up thoroughly from all aspects. 

But in addition to criticising anarchism we must explain 
our own position and in that way expound in general outline the 
doctrine of Marx and Engels. This is all the more necessary for 
the reason that some Anarchists are spreading false conceptions 
about Marxism and are causing confusion in the minds of readers. 

And so, let us proceed with our subject. 



374 APPENDIX 



Everything in the world is in motion. . . . 
Life changes, productive forces grow, old 
relations collapse. . . . Eternal motion and 
eternal destruction and creation — such is 
the essence of life. 

Karl Marx 

(See The Poverty of Philosophy) 

Marxism is not only the theory of socialism, it is an integral 
world outlook, a philosophical system, from which Marx's prole- 
tarian socialism logically follows. This philosophical system is 
called dialectical materialism. Clearly, to expound Marxism means 
to expound also dialectical materialism. 

Why is this system called dialectical materialism? 

Because its method is dialectical, and its theory is materi- 
alistic. 

What is the dialectical method? 

What is the materialist theory? 

It is said that life consists in constant growth and develop- 
ment. And that is true: social life is not something immutable and 
static, it never remains at one level, it is in eternal motion, in an 
eternal process of destruction and creation. It was with good rea- 
son that Marx said that eternal motion and eternal destruction 
and creation are the essence of life. Therefore, life always contains 
the new and the old, the growing and the dying, revolution and 
reaction — in it something is always dying, and at the same time 
something is always being born. . . . 

The dialectical method tells us that we must regard life as it 
actually is. Life is in continual motion, and therefore life must 
be viewed in its motion, in its destruction and creation. Where 
is life going, what is dying and what is being born in life, what 
is being destroyed and what is being created? — these are the ques- 
tions that should interest us first of all. 

Such is the first conclusion of the dialectical method. 

That which in life is born and grows day by day is invincible, 
its progress cannot be checked, its victory is inevitable. That 
is to say, if, for example, in life the proletariat is born and grows 



APPENDIX 375 



day by day, no matter how weak and small in numbers it may 
be today, in the long run it must triumph On the other hand, 
that which in life is dying and moving towards its grave must 
inevitably suffer defeat, i.e., if, for example, the bourgeoisie 
is losing ground and is slipping farther and farther back every 
day, then, no matter how strong and numerous it may be today, it 
must, in the long run, suffer defeat and go to its grave. Hence 
arose the well-known dialectical proposition: all that which really 
exists, i.e., all that which grows day by day is rational. 

Such is the second conclusion of the dialectical method. 

In the eighties of the nineteenth century a famous controver- 
sy flared up among the Russian revolutionary intelligentsia The 
Narodniks asserted that the main force that could undertake the 
task of "emancipating Russia" was the poor peasantry. Why? — the 
Marxists asked them. Because, answered the Narodniks, the peas- 
antry is the most numerous and at the same time the poorest 
section of Russian society. To this the Marxists replied: It is true 
that today the peasantry constitutes the majority and that it 
is very poor, but is that the point? The peasantry has long con- 
stituted the majority, but up to now it has displayed no initiative 
in the struggle for "freedom" without the assistance of the prole- 
tariat. Why? Because the peasantry as a class is disintegrating 
day by day, it is breaking up into the proletariat and the bourgeoi- 
sie, whereas the proletariat as a class is day by day growing and 
gaining strength. Nor is poverty of decisive importance here: 
tramps are poorer than the peasants, but nobody will say that they 
can undertake the task of "emancipating Russia." The only thing 
that matters is: Who is growing and who is becoming aged in life? 
As the proletariat is the only class which is steadily growing and 
gaining strength, our duty is to take our place by its side and recog- 
nise it as the main force in the Russian revolution — that is how 
the Marxists answered. As you see, the Marxists looked at the ques- 
tion from the dialectical standpoint, whereas the Narodniks 
argued metaphysically, because they regarded the phenomena of 
life as "immutable, static, given once and for all" (see F. Engels, 
Philosophy, Political Economy, Socialism). 

That is how the dialectical method looks upon the movement 
of life. 



376 APPENDIX 



But there is movement and movement. There was social move- 
ment in the "December days" when the proletariat, straighten- 
ing its back, stormed arms depots and launched an attack upon 
reaction. But the movement of preceding years, when the prole- 
tariat, under the conditions of "peaceful" development, limited 
itself to individual strikes and the formation of small trade 
unions, must also be called social movement. Clearly, movement 
assumes different forms. And so the dialectical method says that 
movement has two forms: the evolutionary and the revolutionary 
form. Movement is evolutionary when the progressive elements 
spontaneously continue their daily activities and introduce minor, 
quantitative changes in the old order. Movement is revolutionary 
when the same elements combine, become imbued with a single 
idea and sweep down upon the enemy camp with the object of up- 
rooting the old order and its qualitative features and to establish a 
new order. Evolution prepares for revolution and creates the 
ground for it; revolution consummates the process of evolution 
and facilitates its further activity. 

Similar processes take place in nature. The history of science 
shows that the dialectical method is a truly scientific method: 
from astronomy to sociology, in every field we find confirmation 
of the idea that nothing is eternal in the universe, everything 
changes, everything develops. Consequently, everything in nature 
must be regarded from the point of view of movement, develop- 
ment. And this means that the spirit of dialectics permeates the 
whole of present-day science. 

As regards the forms of movement, as regards the fact that 
according to dialectics, minor, quantitative changes sooner or later 
lead to major, qualitative changes — this law applies with equal 
force to the history of nature. Mendeleyev's "periodic system of 
elements" clearly shows how very important in the history of 
nature is the emergence of qualitative changes out of quantita- 
tive changes. The same thing is shown in biology by the theory 
of neo-Lamarckism, to which neo-Darwinism is yielding place. 

We shall say nothing about other facts, on which F. Engels 
has thrown sufficiently full light in his Anti-Diihring. 



APPENDIX 377 



Thus, we are now familiar with the dialectical method. We 
know that according to that method the universe is in eternal 
motion, in an eternal process of destruction and creation, 
and that, consequently, all phenomena in nature and in society 
must be viewed in motion, in process of destruction and crea- 
tion and not as something static and immobile. We also know 
that this motion has two forms: evolutionary and revolution- 
ary. . . . 

How do our Anarchists look upon the dialectical method? 

Everybody knows that Hegel was the father of the dialectical 
method. Marx merely purged and improved this method. 
The Anarchists are aware of this; they also know that Hegel was a 
conservative, and so, taking advantage of the "opportunity," 
they vehemently revile Hegel, throw mud at him as a "reaction- 
ary," as a supporter of restoration, and zealously try to "prove" 
that "Hegel ... is a philosopher of restoration . . . that he eulo- 
gizes bureaucratic constitutionalism in its absolute form, that 
the general idea of his philosophy of history is subordinate to and 
serves the philosophical trend of the period of restoration," and 
so on and so forth (see Nobati, No. 6. Article by V. Cherkezishvili). 
True, nobody contests what they say on this point; on the contra- 
ry, everybody agrees that Hegel was not a revolutionary, that 
he was an advocate of monarchy, nevertheless, the Anarchists go 
on trying to "prove" and deem it necessary to go on endlessly 
trying to "prove" that Hegel was a supporter of "restoration." 
Why do they do this? Probably, in order by all this to discredit 
Hegel, to make their readers feel that the method of the "reaction- 
ary" Hegel is also "repugnant" and unscientific. If that is so, 
if Messieurs the Anarchists think they can refute the dialectical 
method in this way, then I must say that in this way they can prove 
nothing but their own simplicity. Pascal and Leibnitz were not 
revolutionaries, but the mathematical method they discovered 
is recognised today as a scientific method; Mayer and Helmholtz 
were not revolutionaries, but their discoveries in the field of phys- 
ics became the basis of science; nor were Lamarck and Darwin 
revolutionaries, but their evolutionary method put biological 
science on its feet. . . . Yes, in this way Messieurs the Anarchists 
will prove nothing but their own simplicity. 



378 APPENDIX 



To proceed. In the opinion of the Anarchists "dialectics is 
metaphysics" (see Nobati, No. 9. Sh. G.), and as they "want 
to free science from metaphysics, philosophy from theology" 
(see Nobati, No. 3. Sh. G.), they repudiate the dialectical 
method. 

Oh, those Anarchists! As the saying goes: "Blame others for 
your own sins." Dialectics matured in the struggle against meta- 
physics and gained fame in this struggle; but according to the 
Anarchists, "dialectics is metaphysics"! Proudhon, the "father" 
of the Anarchists, believed that there existed in the world an 
"immutable justice" established once and for all (see Eltzbacher's 
Anarchism, pp. 64-68, foreign edition) and for this Proudhon 
has been called a metaphysician. Marx fought Proudhon with 
the aid of the dialectical method and proved that since everything 
in the world changes, "justice" must also change, and that, con- 
sequently, "immutable justice" is metaphysical fantasy (see 
Marx, The Poverty of Philosophy). Yet the Georgian disciples of 
the metaphysician Proudhon come out and try to "prove" that 
"dialectics is metaphysics," that metaphysics recognises the "un- 
knowable" and the "thing-in-itself," and in the long run passes into 
empty theology. In contrast to Proudhon and Spencer, Engels 
combated metaphysics as well as theology with the aid of the dia- 
lectical method (see Engels, Ludwig Feuerbach and Anti-Duhring). 
He proved how ridiculously vapid they were. Our Anarchists, how- 
ever, try to "prove" that Proudhon and Spencer were scientists, 
whereas Marx and Engels were metaphysicians. One of two things: 
either Messieurs the Anarchists are deceiving themselves, or they 
fail to understand what is metaphysics. At all events, the dialec- 
tical method is entirely free from blame. 

What other accusations do Messieurs the Anarchists hurl 
against the dialectical method? They say that the dialectical meth- 
od is "subtle word-weaving," "the method of sophistry," "logical 
and mental somersaults" (see Nobati, No. 8. Sh. G.) "with the aid 
of which both truth and falsehood are proved with equal facility" 
(see Nobati, No. 4. V. Cherkezishvili). 

At first sight it would seem that the accusation advanced by 
the Anarchists is correct. Listen to what Engels says about the 
follower of the metaphysical method: ". . . His communication is: 



APPENDIX 379 



'Yea, yea; nay, nay, for whatsoever is more than these cometh 
of evil.' For him a thing either exists, or it does not exist; it is 
equally impossible for a thing to be itself and at the same time 
something else. Positive and negative absolutely exclude one an- 
other . . ." (see Anti-Diihring, Introduction). How is that? — the 
Anarchist cries heatedly. Is it possible for a thing to be good and 
bad at the same time?! That is "sophistry," "juggling with words," 
it shows that "you want to prove truth and falsehood with equal 
facility! . . ." 

Let us, however, go into the substance of the matter. Today 
we are demanding a democratic republic. The democratic republic, 
however, strengthens bourgeois property. Can we say that a demo- 
cratic republic is good always and everywhere? No, we cannot! Why? 
Because a democratic republic is good only "today," when we are 
destroying feudal property, but "tomorrow," when we shall pro- 
ceed to destroy bourgeois property and establish socialist proper- 
ty, the democratic republic will no longer be good; on the contrary, 
it will become a fetter, which we shall smash and cast aside. But 
as life is in continual motion, as it is impossible to separate the 
past from the present, and as we are simultaneously fighting the 
feudal rulers and the bourgeoisie, we say: in so far as the democrat- 
ic republic destroys feudal property it is good and we advocate 
it, but in so far as it strengthens bourgeois property it is bad, and 
therefore we criticise it. It follows, therefore, that the democratic 
republic is simultaneously both "good" and "bad," and thus the 
answer to the question raised may be both "yes" and "no." It was 
facts of this kind that Engels had in mind when he proved the cor- 
rectness of the dialectical method in the words quoted above. 
The Anarchists, however, failed to understand this and to them 
it seemed to be "sophistry"! The Anarchists are, of course, at lib- 
erty to note or ignore these facts, they may even ignore the sand 
on the sandy seashore — they have every right to do that. But why 
drag in the dialectical method, which, unlike the Anarchists, 
does not look at life with its eyes shut, which has its finger on the 
pulse of life and openly says: since life changes, since life is 
in motion, every phenomenon of life has two trends: a positive 
and a negative; the first we must defend and the second we must 
reject? What astonishing people those Anarchists are: they are 



380 APPENDIX 



constantly talking about "justice," but they treat the dialectical 
method with gross injustice! 

To proceed further. In the opinion of our Anarchists, "dia- 
lectical development is catastrophic development, by means of 
which, first the past is utterly destroyed, and then the future is 
established quite separately. . . . Cuvier's cataclysms were due 
to unknown causes, but Marx and Engels's catastrophes are en- 
gendered by dialectics" (see Nobati, No. 8. Sh. G.). In another 
place the same author says that "Marxism rests on Darwinism 
and treats it uncritically" (see Nobati, No. 6). 

Ponder well over that, reader! 

Cuvier rejects Darwin's theory of evolution, he recognises 
only cataclysms, and cataclysms are unexpected upheavals "due 
to unknown causes." The Anarchists say that the Marxists adhere 
to Cuvier's view and therefore repudiate Darwinism. 

Darwin rejects Cuvier's cataclysms, he recognises gradual 
evolution. But the same Anarchists say that "Marxism rests on 
Darwinism and treats it uncritically," therefore, the Marxists do 
not advocate Cuvier's cataclysms. 

This is anarchy if you like! As the saying goes: the Sergeant's 
widow flogged herself! Clearly, Sh. G. of No. 8 of Nobati forgot 
what Sh. G. of No. 6 said. Which is right: No. 6 or No. 8? Or are 
they both lying? 

Let us turn to the facts. Marx says: "At a certain stage of 
their development, the material productive forces of society come 
in conflict with the existing relations of production, or — what is 
but a legal expression for the same thing — with the property re- 
lations. . . . Then begins an epoch of social revolution." But 
"no social order ever perishes before all the productive forces 
for which there is room in it have developed . . ." (see K. Marx, 
A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy. Preface). If 
this idea of Marx is applied to modern social life, we shall find 
that between the present-day productive forces which are social 
in character, and the method of appropriating the product, which 
is private in character, there is a fundamental conflict which 
must culminate in the socialist revolution (see F. Engels, Anti- 
DUhring, Chapter II, Part III). As you see, in the opinion of Marx 
and Engels, "revolution" ("catastrophe") is engendered not by 



APPENDIX 381 



Cuvier's "unknown causes," but by very definite and vital social 
causes called "the development of the productive forces." As you 
see, in the opinion of Marx and Engels, revolution comes only 
when the productive forces have sufficiently matured, and not 
unexpectedly, as Cuvier imagined. Clearly, there is nothing in 
common between Cuvier's cataclysms and the dialectical 
method. On the other hand, Darwinism repudiates not only 
Cuvier's cataclysms, but also dialectically conceived revolution, 
whereas according to the dialectical method evolution and revolu- 
tion, quantitative and qualitative changes, are two essential 
forms of the same motion. Clearly, it is also wrong to say that 
"Marxism . . . treats Darwinism uncritically." It follows there- 
fore that Nobati is lying in both cases, in No. 6 as well as in 
No. 8. 

And so these lying "critics" buttonhole us and go on repeat- 
ing: Whether you like it or not our lies are better than your truth! 
Probably they believe that everything is pardonable in an 
Anarchist. 

There is another thing for which Messieurs the Anarchists 
cannot forgive the dialectical method: "Dialectics . . . provides 
no possibility of getting, or jumping, out of oneself, or of jumping 
over oneself (see Nobati, No. 8. Sh. G.). Now that is the downright 
truth. Messieurs Anarchists! Here you are absolutely right, my 
dear sirs: the dialectical method does not provide such a possibil- 
ity. But why not? Because "jumping out of oneself, or jump- 
ing over oneself," is an exercise for wild goats, while the 
dialectical method was created for human beings. That is the 
secret! . . . 

Such, in general, are our Anarchists' views on the dialecti- 
cal method. 

Clearly, the Anarchists fail to understand the dialectical 
method of Marx and Engels; they have conjured up their own 
dialectics, and it is against this dialectics that they are fighting 
so ruthlessly. 

All we can do is to laugh as we gaze at this spectacle, for one 
cannot help laughing when one sees a man fighting his own imagi- 
nation, smashing his own inventions, while at the same time 
heatedly asserting that he is smashing his opponent. 



382 APPENDIX 



II 



"/^ is not the consciousness of men that 
determines their being, but, on the contrary, 
their social being that determines their 
consciousness. " 

Karl Marx 

What is the materialist theory? 

Everything in the world changes, everything in the world is 
in motion, but how do these changes take place and in what form 
does this motion proceed? — that is the question. We know, for 
example, that the earth was once an incandescent, fiery mass, then 
it gradually cooled, then the animal kingdom appeared and devel- 
oped, then appeared a species of ape from which man subsequently 
originated. But how did this development take place? Some say 
that nature and its development were preceded by the universal 
idea, which subsequently served as the basis of this development, 
so that the development of the phenomena of nature, it would ap- 
pear, is merely the form of the development of the idea. These peo- 
ple were called idealists, who later split up and followed different 
trends. Others say that from the very beginning there have existed 
in the world two opposite forces — idea and matter, and that corre- 
spondingly, phenomena are also divided into two categories, the 
ideal and the material, which are in constant conflict. Thus the 
development of the phenomena of nature, it would appear, repre- 
sents a constant struggle between ideal and material phenomena. 
Those people are called dualists, and they, like the idealists, are 
split up into different schools. 

Marx's materialist theory utterly repudiates both dualism 
and idealism. Of course, both ideal and material phenomena 
exist in the world, but this does not mean that they negate each 
other. On the contrary, the ideal and the material are two differ- 
ent forms of the same phenomenon; they exist together and develop 
together; there is a close connection between them. That being so, 
we have no grounds for thinking that they negate each other. Thus, 
so-called dualism crumbles to its foundations. A single and indiv- 



APPENDIX 383 



isible nature expressed in two different forms — material and ideal — 
that is how we should regard the development of nature. A single 
and indivisible life expressed in two different forms — ideal and 
material — that is how we should regard the development of 
life. 

Such is the monism of Marx's materialist theory. 

At the same time, Marx also repudiates idealism. It is wrong 
to think that the development of the idea, and of the spiritual 
side in general, precedes nature and the material side in general. 
So-called external, inorganic nature existed before there were 
any living beings. The first living matter — protoplasm — pos- 
sessed no consciousness (idea), it possessed only irritability and 
the first rudiments of sensation. Later, animals gradually devel- 
oped the power of sensation, which slowly passed into conscious- 
ness, in conformity with the development of their nervous sys- 
tems. If the ape had never stood upright, if it had always walked 
on all fours, its descendant — man — would not have been able 
freely to use his lungs and vocal chords and, therefore, would 
not have been able to speak; and that would have greatly retarded 
the development of his consciousness. If, furthermore, the ape had 
not risen up on its hind legs, its descendant — man — would have 
been compelled always to look downwards and obtain his impres- 
sions only from there; he would have been unable to look up and 
around himself and, consequently, his brain would have obtained 
no more material (impressions) than that of the ape; and that 
would have greatly retarded the development of his consciousness. 
It follows that the development of the spiritual side is conditioned 
by the structure of the organism and the development of its nerv- 
ous system. It follows that the development of the spiritual side, 
the development of ideas, is preceded by the development of the 
material side, the development of being. Clearly, first the exter- 
nal conditions change, first matter changes, and then conscious- 
ness and other spiritual phenomena change accordingly — the de- 
velopment of the ideal side lags behind the development of mate- 
rial conditions. If we call the material side, the external condi- 
tions, being, etc., the content, then we must call the ideal side, 
consciousness and other phenomena of the same kind, the 
form. Hence arose the well-known materialist proposition: in the 



384 APPENDIX 



process of development content precedes form, form lags behind 
content. 

The same must be said about social life. Here, too, material 
development precedes ideal development, here, too, form lags be- 
hind its content. Capitalism existed and a fierce class struggle 
raged long before scientific socialism was even thought of; the 
process of production already bore a social character long before 
the socialist idea arose. 

That is why Marx says: "It is not the consciousness of men 
that determines their being, but, on the contrary, their social 
being that determines their consciousness" (see K. Marx, A Con- 
tribution to the Critique of Political Economy). In Marx's opinion, 
economic development is the material foundation of social life, 
its content, while legal-political and religious-philosophical de- 
velopment is the ''ideological form" of this content, its "super- 
structure." Marx, therefore, says: "With the change of the econom- 
ic foundation the entire immense superstructure is more or less 
rapidly transformed" {ibid). 

In social life too, first the external, material conditions change 
and then the thoughts of men, their world outlook, change. The 
development of content precedes the rise and development of form. 
This, of course, does not mean that in Marx's opinion content is 
possible without form, as Sh. G. imagines (see Nobati, No. 1. "A 
Critique of Monism"). Content is impossible without form, but 
the point is that since a given form lags behind its content, it 
never fully corresponds to this content; and so the new content is 
often "obliged" to clothe itself for a time in the old form, and this 
causes a conflict between them. At the present time, for example, the 
private character of the appropriation of the product does not corre- 
spond to the social content of production, and this is the basis of the 
present-day social "conflict." On the other hand, the conception that 
the idea is a form of being does not mean that, by its nature, con- 
sciousness is the same as matter. That was the opinion held only by 
the vulgar materialists (for example, Biichner and Moleschott), 
whose theories fundamentally contradict Marx's materialism, and 
whom Engels rightly ridiculed in his Ludwig Feuerbach. According 
to Marx's materialism, consciousness and being, mind and matter, 
are two different forms of the same phenomenon, which, broadly 



APPENDIX 385 



speaking, is called nature. Consequently, they do not negate each 
other,* but nor are they one and the same phenomenon. The only 
point is that, in the development of nature and society, conscious- 
ness, i.e., what takes place in our heads, is preceded by a corre- 
sponding material change, i.e., what takes place outside of us. 
Any given material change is, sooner or later, inevitably followed 
by a corresponding ideal change. That is why we say that an ideal 
change is the form of a corresponding material change. 

Such, in general, is the monism of the dialectical materialism 
of Marx and Engels. 

We shall be told by some: All this may well be true as applied 
to the history of nature and society. But how do different concep- 
tions and ideas about given objects arise in our heads at the pres- 
ent time? Do so-called external conditions really exist, or is 
it only our conceptions of these external conditions that exist? 
And if external conditions exist, to what degree are they percep- 
tible and cognizable? 

On this point we say that our conceptions, our "self," exist only 
in so far as external conditions exist that give rise to impressions 
in our "self." Whoever unthinkingly says that nothing exists 
but our conceptions, is compelled to deny the existence of all 
external conditions and, consequently, must deny the existence 
of all other people except his own "self," which fundamentally 
contradicts the main principles of science and vital activity. Yes, 
external conditions do actually exist; these conditions existed 
before us, and will exist after us; and the more often and the more 
strongly they affect our consciousness, the more easily perceptible 
and cognizable do they become. As regards the question as to how 
different conceptions and ideas about given objects arise in our 
heads at the present time, we must observe that here we have a 
repetition in brief of what takes place in the history of nature and 
society. In this case, too, the object outside of us precedes our 
conception of it; in this case, too, our conception, the form, lags 



* This does not contradict the idea that there is a conflict between form 
and content. The point is that the conflict is not between content and form in 
general, but between the old form and the new content, which is seeking 
a new form and is striving towards it. 



386 APPENDIX 



behind the object, its content, and so forth. When I look at a 
tree and see it — that only shows that this tree existed even be- 
fore the conception of a tree arose in my head; that it was this 
tree that aroused the corresponding conception in my head. 

The importance of the monistic materialism of Marx and 
Engels for the practical activities of mankind can be readily under- 
stood. If our world outlook, if our habits and customs are deter- 
mined by external conditions, if the unsuitability of legal and polit- 
ical forms rests on an economic content, it is clear that we must 
help to bring about a radical change in economic relations in order, 
with this change, to bring about a radical change in the habits and 
customs of the people, and in the political system of the country. 
Here is what Karl Marx says on that score: 

"No great acumen is required to perceive the necessary in- 
terconnection of materialism with . . . socialism. If man con- 
structs all his knowledge, perceptions, etc., from the world of 
sense . . . then it follows that it is a question of so arranging the 
empirical world that he experiences the truly human in it, that 
he becomes accustomed to experiencing himself as a human 
being. ... If man is unfree in the materialist sense — that is, is 
free not by reason of the negative force of being able to avoid this 
or that, but by reason of the positive power to assert his true in- 
dividuality, then one should not punish individuals for crimes, 
but rather destroy the anti-social breeding places of crime. . . . 
If man is moulded by circumstances, then the circumstances must 
be moulded humanly" (see Ludwig Feuerbach, Appendix: "Karl 
Marx on the History of French Materialism of the XVIII 
Century"). 

Such is the connection between materialism and the practical 
activities of men. 



What is the anarchist view of the monistic materialism of 
Marx and Engels? 

While Marx's dialectics originated with Hegel, his material- 
ism is a development of Feuerbach's materialism. The Anarchists 
know this very well, and they try to take advantage of the 
defects of Hegel and Feuerbach to discredit the dialectical 



APPENDIX 387 



materialism of Marx and Engels. We have already shown with 
reference to Hegel that these tricks of the Anarchists prove noth- 
ing but their own polemical impotence. The same must be said 
with reference to Feuerbach. For example, they strongly empha- 
sise that "Feuerbach was a pantheist . . ." that he "deified 
man . . ." (see Nobati, No. 7. D. Delendi), that "in Feuerbach's 
opinion man is what he eats . . ." alleging that from this Marx 
drew the following conclusion: "Consequently, the main and pri- 
mary thing is economic conditions," etc. (see Nobati, No. 6. Sh. G.). 
True, nobody has any doubts about Feuerbach's pantheism, 
his deification of man, and other errors of his of the same kind. 
On the contrary, Marx and Engels were the first to reveal Feuer- 
bach's errors; nevertheless, the Anarchists deem it necessary 
once again to "expose" the already exposed errors of Feuerbach. 
Why? Probably because, in reviling Feuerbach, they want 
at least in some way to discredit the materialism which Marx bor- 
rowed from Feuerbach and then scientifically developed. Could 
not Feuerbach have had correct as well as erroneous ideas? We 
say that by tricks of this kind the Anarchists will not shake mo- 
nistic materialism in the least; all they will do is to prove their 
own impotence. 

The Anarchists disagree among themselves about Marx's 
materialism. If, for example, we listen to what Mr. Cherkezishvili 
has to say, it would appear that Marx and Engels detested monistic 
materialism; in his opinion their materialism is vulgar and not 
monistic materialism: "The great science of the naturalists, with 
its system of evolution, transformism and monistic materialism 
which Engels so heartily detested . . . avoided dialectics," etc. 
(see Nobati, No. 4. V. Cherkezishvili). It follows, therefore, that the 
natural-scientific materialism, which Cherkezishvili likes and which 
Engels detested, was monistic materialism. Another Anarchist, how- 
ever, tells us that the materialism of Marx and Engels is monistic 
and should therefore be rejected. "Marx's conception of history is a 
throwback to Hegel. The monistic materialism of absolute objec- 
tivism in general, and Marx's economic monism in particular, 
are impossible in nature and fallacious in theory. . . . Monistic 
materialism is poorly disguised dualism and a compromise 
between metaphysics and science . . ." (see Nobati, No. 6. Sh. G.). 



388 APPENDIX 



It would follow that monistic materialism is unacceptable because 
Marx and Engels, far from detesting it, were actually monistic 
materialists themselves, and therefore monistic materialism must 
be rejected. 

This is anarchy if you like! They have not yet grasped the 
substance of Marx's materialism, they have not yet understood 
whether it is monistic materialism or not, they have not yet 
agreed among themselves about its merits and demerits, but they 
already deafen us with their boastful claims: We criticise and 
raze Marx's materialism to the ground! This by itself shows what 
grounds their "criticism" can have. 

To proceed further. It appears that certain Anarchists are even 
ignorant of the fact that in science there are various forms of mate- 
rialism, which differ a great deal from one another: there is, for 
example, vulgar materialism (in natural science and history), 
which denies the importance of the ideal side and the effect it 
has upon the material side; but there is also so-called monistic 
materialism, which scientifically examines the interrelation be- 
tween the ideal and the material sides. Some Anarchists confuse 
all this and at the same time affirm with great aplomb: Whether 
you like it or not, we subject the materialism of Marx and Engels 
to devastating criticism! Listen to this: "In the opinion of Engels, 
and also of Kautsky, Marx rendered mankind a great service in 
that he . . ." among other things, discovered the "materialist 
conception." "Is this true? We do not think so, for we know . . . 
that all the historians, scientists and philosophers who adhere 
to the view that the social mechanism is set in motion by geograph- 
ic, climatic and telluric, cosmic, anthropological and biological 
conditions — are all materialists" (see Nobati, No. 2. Sh. G.). How 
can you talk to such people? It appears, then, that there is no differ- 
ence between the "materialism" of Aristotle and of Montesquieu, 
or between the "materialism" of Marx and of Saint-Simon. A fine 
example, indeed, of understanding your opponent and subjecting 
him to devastating criticism! 

Some Anarchists heard somewhere that Marx's materialism 
was a "belly theory" and set about popularising this "idea," 
probably because paper is cheap in the editorial office of Nobati 
and this process does not cost much. Listen to this: "In the opin- 



APPENDIX 389 



ion of Feuerbach man is wliat lie eats. Tliis formula had a magic 
effect on Marx and Engels," and so, in the opinion of the Anarch- 
ists, Marx drew from this the conclusion that "consequently 
the main and primary thing is economic conditions, relations of 
production. . . ." And then the Anarchists proceed to instruct 
us in a philosophical tone: "It would be a mistake to say that the 
sole means of achieving this object (of social life) is eating and 
economic production. ... If ideology were determined mainly 
monistically, by eating and economic existence — then some glut- 
tons would be geniuses" (see Nobati, No. 6. Sh. G.). You see how 
easy it is to criticise Marx's materialism! It is sufficient to hear 
some gossip in the street from some schoolgirl about Marx and 
Engels, it is sufficient to repeat that street gossip with philosophical 
aplomb in the columns of a paper like Nobati, to leap into fame as a 
"critic." But tell me one thing, gentlemen: Where, when, in what 
country, and which Marx did you hear say that "eating determines 
ideology"? Why did you not cite a single sentence, a single word 
from the works of Marx to back your accusation? Is economic exist- 
ence and eating the same thing? One can forgive a schoolgirl, say, for 
confusing these entirely different concepts, but how is it that you, 
the "vanquishers of Social-Democracy," "regenerators of science," 
so carelessly repeat the mistake of a schoolgirl? How, indeed, can 
eating determine social ideology? Ponder over what you your- 
selves have said; eating, the form of eating, does not change; in 
ancient times people ate, masticated and digested their food in the 
same way as they do now, but the forms of ideology constantly 
change and develop. Ancient, feudal, bourgeois and proletarian — 
such are the forms of ideology. Is it conceivable that that which 
generally speaking, does not change can determine that which 
is constantly changing? Marx does, indeed, say that economic 
existence determines ideology, and this is easy to understand, 
but is eating and economic existence the same thing? Why 
do you think it proper to attribute your own foolishness to 
Marx? 

To proceed further. In the opinion of our Anarchists, Marx's 
materialism "is parallelism. . . ." Or again: "monistic materialism 
is poorly disguised dualism and a compromise between metaphys- 
ics and science. . . ." "Marx drops into dualism because he 



390 APPENDIX 



depicts relations of production as material, and human striving and 
will as an illusion and a Utopia, which, even though it exists, is 
of no importance" (see Nobati, No. 6. Sh. G.)- Firstly, Marx's mo- 
nistic materialism has nothing in common with silly parallelism. 
From the standpoint of materialism, the material side, content, 
necessarily precedes the ideal side, form. Parallelism repudiates 
this view and emphatically affirms that neither the material nor 
the ideal comes first, that both move together, parallel with each 
other. Secondly, what is there in common between Marx's monism 
and dualism when we know perfectly well (and you. Messieurs 
Anarchists, should also know this if you read Marxist literature!) 
that the former springs from one principle — nature, which has a 
material and an ideal form, whereas the latter springs from two 
principles — the material and the ideal which, according to dualism, 
mutually negate each other. Thirdly, who said that "human striv- 
ing and will are not important"? Why don't you point to the 
place where Marx says that? Does not Marx speak of the importance 
of "striving and will" in his Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bona- 
parte, in his Class Struggles in France, in his Civil War in France, 
and in other pamphlets? Why, then, did Marx try to develop the 
proletarians' "will and striving" in the socialist spirit, why did he 
conduct propaganda among them if he attached no importance to 
"striving and will"? Or, what did Engels talk about in his well- 
known articles of 1891-94 if not the "importance of striving and 
will"? Human striving and will acquire their content from eco- 
nomic existence, but that does not mean that they exert no influ- 
ence on the development of economic relations. Is it really so diffi- 
cult for our Anarchists to digest this simple idea? It is rightly said 
that a passion for criticism is one thing, but criticism itself is 
another. 

Here is another accusation Messieurs the Anarchists make: 
"form is inconceivable without content . . ." therefore, one can- 
not say that "form lags behind content . . . they 'co-exist.'. . . 
Otherwise, monism would be an absurdity" (see Nobati, No. I. 
Sh. G.). Messieurs the Anarchists are somewhat confused. Content 
is inconceivable without form, but the existing form never fully 
corresponds to the existing content; to a certain extent the new 
content is always clothed in the old form, as a consequence, there 



APPENDIX 391 



is always a conflict between the old form and the new content. It 
is precisely on this ground that revolutions occur, and this, among 
other things, expresses the revolutionary spirit of Marx's mate- 
rialism The Anarchists, however, have failed to understand this 
and obstinately repeat that there is no content without form. . . . 

Such are the Anarchists' views on materialism. We shall say 
no more. It is sufficiently clear as it is that the Anarchists have 
invented their own Marx, have ascribed to him a "materialism" of 
their own invention, and are now fighting this "materialism." 
But not a single bullet of theirs hits the true Marx and the true 
materialism. . . . 

What connection is there between dialectical materialism 
and proletarian socialism? 

Akhali Tskhovreba 
{New Life), Nos. 2, 4, 
7 and 16, June 21, 24 
and 28 and July 9, 1906 

Signed: Koba 

Translated from the Georgian 



NOTES 



Brdzola {The Struggle) — the first illegal Georgian newspaper 
issued by the Leninist-AvA:ra group of the Tiflis Social- 
Democratic organisation. It was founded on the initiative of 
J. V. Stalin. The newspaper was launched as a result of the 
struggle that had been waged since 1898 by the revolutionary 
minority in the first Georgian Social-Democratic organisation 
known as the Messameh Dassy (J. V. Stalin, V. Z. Ketskhoveli 
and A. G. Tsulukidze) against the opportunist majority (Jorda- 
nia and others) on the question of instituting an underground 
revolutionary Marxist press. Brdzola was printed in Baku at an 
underground printing plant that had been organised by V. Z. 
Ketskhoveli, J. V. Stalin's closest colleague, on the instructions 
of the revolutionary wing of the Tiflis Social-Democratic organ- 
isation. He was also responsible for the practical work of issu- 
ing the newspaper. The leading articles in Brdzola on questions 
concerning the programme and tactics of the revolutionary Marx- 
ist party were written by J. V. Stalin. Four numbers of Brdzola 
were issued: No. 1, in September 1901; No. 2-3, in November- 
December 1901; and No. 4, in December 1902. The best Marxist 
newspaper in Russia next to Iskra, Brdzola urged that there 
was an inseverable connection between the revolutionary 
struggle that was being waged by the Transcaucasian prole- 
tariat and the revolutionary struggle waged by the working 
class all over Russia. Propagating the theoretical principles 
of revolutionary Marxism, Brdzola, like Lenin's Iskra, urged 
that the Social-Democratic organisations must proceed to 
take up mass political agitation and the political struggle 



NOTES 393 



against the autocracy, and advocated the Leninist idea of the 
hegemony of the proletariat in the bourgeois-democratic revo- 
lution. In its fight against the "Economists," Brdzola urged 
the necessity of creating a united revolutionary party of the 
working class and exposed the liberal bourgeoisie, nationalists 
and opportunists of all shades. Commenting on the appearance 
of No. 1 of Brdzola, Lenin's Iskra stated that it was an event 
of extreme importance. p. i 



2 



3 



4 



5 



Rabochaya Mysl {Workers' Thought) — a newspaper which open- 
ly advocated the opportunist views of the "Economists." 
Published from October 1897 to December 1902. Sixteen issues 
appeared. p. 75 

The Law of June 2, 1897, fixed the working day for workers in 
industrial enterprises and railway workshops at llVj hours, and 
also reduced the number of holidays for the workers. p. 15 

This refers to the "Provisional Regulations Governing Mili- 
tary Service for Students at Higher Educational Establish- 
ments" introduced by the government on July 29, 1899. On 
the basis of these regulations, students who took part in col- 
lective demonstrations against the police regime that had been 
introduced in higher educational establishments were expelled 
and conscripted as privates in the tsarist army for a period 
ranging from one to three years. p. 23 

Shkartvelo {Georgia) — a newspaper published by a group 
of Georgian nationalists abroad which became the core of 
the bourgeois-nationalist party of the Social-Federalists. The 
newspaper was published in Paris in the Georgian and French 
languages, and ran from 1903 to 1905. 

The party of the Georgian Federalists (formed in Geneva 
in April 1904) consisted of the Sakartvelo group, as well as 
of Anarchists, Socialist-Revolutionaries and National-Demo- 
crats. The principal demand of the Federalists was national 
autonomy for Georgia within the Russian landlord-bourgeois 



394 NOTES 



State. During the period of reaction they became avowed 
enemies of the revolution. p. 33 



6 



7 



8 



The Armenian Social-Democratic Labour Organisation was 
formed by Armenian National-Federalist elements soon after 
the Second Congress of the Russian Social-Democratic Labour 
Party. V. I. Lenin noted the close connection between this 
organisation and the Bund. In a letter to the members of the 
Central Committee of the Party dated September 7 (New Style), 
1905, he wrote: "This is a creature of the Bund, nothing more, 
invented especially for the purpose of fostering Caucasian 
Bundism. . . . The Caucasian comrades are all opposed to 
this gang of pen-pushing disruptors" (see Lenin, Works, 
4th Russ. ed., Vol. 34, p. 290). p. 56 

The Bund — the General Jewish Workers' Union of Lithuania, 
Poland and Russia, a Jewish petty-bourgeois opportunist 
organisation, was formed in October 1897 at a congress in Vilno. 
It carried on its activities chiefly among the Jewish artisans. 
It joined the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party at 
the latter's First Congress in 1898, "as an autonomous organ- 
isation independent only in matters specifically concerning 
the Jewish proletariat." The Bund was a centre of nationalism 
and separatism in the Russian working-class movement. Its 
bourgeois-nationalist stand was sharply criticised by Lenin's 
Iskra. The Caucasian /^Arra-ists whole-heartedly supported 
V. I. Lenin in his struggle against the Bund. p. 39 

This refers to the Party Committees which at the First Congress 
of the Social-Democratic Labour Organisations in the Caucasus 
held in Tiflis in March 1903 united to form the Caucasian 
Union of the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party. Rep- 
resented at the congress were the organisations of Tiflis, 
Baku, Batum, Kutais, Guria, and other districts. The congress 
approved the political line pursued by Lenin's Iskra, adopted 
the programme drafted by Iskra and Zarya for guidance, and 
drew up and endorsed the Rules for the Union. The First Con- 
gress of the Caucasian Union laid the foundation for the inter- 
national structure of the Social-Democratic Organisations in 



NOTES 395 



the Caucasus. The congress set up a directing Party body 
known as the Caucasian Union Committee of the R.S.D.L.P. 
to which J. V. Stalin was elected in his absence, as at that 
time he was confined in the Batum prison. After his flight 
from exile and return to Tiflis in the beginning of 1904, 
J. V. Stalin became the head of the Caucasian Union Committee 
of the R.S.D.L.P. p. 39 

J. V. Stalin's two letters from Kutais were found among the 
correspondence of V. I. Lenin and N. K. Krupskaya with the 
Bolshevik organisations in Russia. He wrote these letters 
while he was in Kutais in September-October 1904, and they 
were addressed to his comrade in revolutionary activity in 
Transcaucasia, M. Davitashvili, who at that time lived in 
Leipzig, Germany, and was a member of the Leipzig group 
of Bolsheviks. In his reminiscences, D. Suliashvili, another 
member of the Leipzig group of Bolsheviks, wrote the following 
about one of these letters: "Soon after, Mikhail Davitashvili 
received a letter from Joseph Stalin who was in Siberia. In 
the letter he spoke enthusiastically and admiringly of Lenin 
and the revolutionary Bolshevik theses Lenin advanced; he 
wished Lenin success and good health and called him a 'moun- 
tain eagle.' We forwarded the letter to Lenin. Soon we received 
an answer from him to be forwarded to Stalin. In his letter 
he called Stalin a 'fiery Colchian'" (see D. Suliashvili, 
Reminiscences About Stalin. Magazine Mnatobi, No. 9, 1935, 
p. 163, in Georgian). The Georgian originals of J. V. Stalin's 
letters have not been found. p. 56 



10 



11 



This refers to the new, Menshevik Iskra {The Spark). After the 
Second Congress of the R.S.D.L.P., the Mensheviks, with the 
assistance of Plekhanov, seized Iskra and utilised it in their 
struggle against V. I. Lenin and the Bolsheviks. In its columns 
they began openly to advocate their opportunist views. The 
Menshevik Iskra ceased publication in October 1905. p. 55 

In the autumn of 1904, after the Mensheviks had seized Iskra, 
V. D. Bonch-Bruyevich, on V. I. Lenin's instructions, organised 



396 NOTES 



a publishing house with the object of publishing "Party liter- 
ature, particularly literature in defence of the principles of 
the majority at the Second Party Congress." The Party Council 
and the Central Committee, which at that time were controlled 
by the Mensheviks, did all in their power to hinder the publi- 
cation and distribution of Bolshevik literature. In this con- 
nection a conference of Caucasian Bolshevik Committees held 
in November 1904 adopted a resolution "On the Literature 
of the Majority" which said: "The conference calls upon the 
Central Committee to supply the Party Committees with the 
literature issued by the Bonch-Bruyevich and Lenin group 
together with other Party literature explaining the disagree- 
ments in the Party." At the end of December 1904 these pub- 
lishing activities passed to the newspaper Vperyod {Forward), 
organised by V. I. Lenin. p. 55 



12 



13 



The Declaration of the 22 was the appeal "To the Party," 
written by V. I. Lenin. It was adopted at the conference 
of Bolsheviks held under Lenin's guidance in Switzer- 
land in August 1904. The pamphlet To the Party which is 
mentioned in J. V. Stalin's letter contained, in addition to 
the appeal "To the Party," the resolutions of the Riga and 
Moscow committees, and also of the Geneva group of Bolshe- 
viks, associating themselves with the decisions of the confer- 
ence of the twenty-two Bolsheviks. The appeal "To the Party" 
became the Bolsheviks' programme of struggle for the convoca- 
tion of the Third Congress. Most of the committees of the 
R.S.D.L.P. expressed solidarity with the decisions of the Bol- 
shevik conference. In September 1904 the Caucasian Union 
Committee, and the Tiflis and Imeretia-Mingrelia Committees, 
associated themselves with the Declaration of the 22 and 
launched a campaign for the immediate convocation of the 
Third Congress of the Party. p. 55 

V. I. Lenin's article "One Step Forward, Two Steps Back" 
was written in September 1904 in answer to an article by Rosa 
Luxemburg entitled "The Organisational Problems of Rus- 
sian Social-Democracy," published in Iskra, No. 69, and in 



NOTES 397 



Neue Zeit, Nos. 42, 43, and also in reply to a letter by 
K. Kautsky published in Iskra, No. 66. Lenin intended to 
have his article published in Neue Zeit, but the editors of 
that magazine sympathised with the Mensheviks and refused 
to publish it. p. 55 



14 



15 



16 



17 



The Minutes of the Second Ordinary Congress of the League 
of Russian Revolutionary Social-Democrats Abroad, published 
by the League in Geneva, in 1904. p. 55 

V. I . Lenin's book One Step Forward , Two Steps Back was written 
in February-May 1904 and appeared on May 6 (19) in that year 
(see Works, 4th Russ. ed.. Vol. 7, pp. 185-392). p. 55 

This refers to V. I. Lenin's book What Is To Be Done? (see 
Works, 4th Russ. ed.. Vol. 5, pp. 319-494). p. 56 

In conformity with the Rules adopted at the Second Congress 
of the R.S.D.L.P., the Party Council was the supreme body 
of the Party. It consisted of five members: two appointed by 
the Central Committee, two by the Central Organ, and the 
fifth elected by the congress. The main function of the Coun- 
cil was to co-ordinate and unite the activities of the Central 
Committee and the Central Organ. Soon after the Second Con- 
gress of the R.S.D.L.P. the Mensheviks obtained control of 
the Party Council and converted it into an instrument of 
their factional struggle. The Third Congress of the R.S.D.L.P. 
abolished the multiple centre system in the Party and set 
up a single Party centre in the shape of the Central Commit- 
tee, which was divided into two sections — one functioning 
abroad, and the other in Russia. In conformity with the Rules 
adopted at the Third Congress, the editor of the Central Organ 
was appointed by the Central Committee from among its 
members. p. 61 

V. I. Lenin's pamphlet A Letter to a Comrade on Our Organisa- 
tional Tasks, with a Preface and Postscript by the author, was 



398 NOTES 



published in Geneva, in 1904, by the Central Committee of the 
R.S.D.L.P. (see Works, 4th Russ. ed., Vol. 6, pp. 205-24). p. 61 

19 

Kostrov — pseudonym of N. Jordania. He also signed him- 
self An. p. 62 

20 

Kvali {The Furrow) — a weekly newspaper published in the 

Georgian language, an organ of the liberal-nationalist trend. 

In the period of 1893-97 it placed its columns at the disposal 

of the young writers of the Messameh Dassy. At the end 

of 1897 the newspaper passed into the hands of the majority 

in Messameh Dassy (N . Jordania and others) and became 

a mouthpiece of "legal Marxism." After the Bolshevik and 

Menshevik groups arose within the R.S.D.L.P. Kvali became 

the organ of the Georgian Mensheviks. The newspaper was 

suppressed by the government in 1904. p. 62 



21 



Proletarians Brdzola {The Proletarian Struggle) — an illegal 
Georgian newspaper, the organ of the Caucasian Union of the 
R.S.D.L.R, published from April-May 1903 to October 1905, 
and suppressed after the issue of the twelfth number. J. V. Stalin 
became its chief editor on his return from exile in 1904. The 
editorial board included also A. G. Tsulukidze, S. G. Shau- 
myan, and others. The leading articles were written by 
J . V. Stalin. Proletariatis Brdzola was the successor to Brdzola. 
The First Congress of the Caucasian Union of the R.S.D.L.P. 
decided to combine Brdzola with Proletariat, the Armenian 
Social-Democratic newspaper, and issue a joint organ in three 
languages: Georgian {Proletarians Brdzola), Armenian {Pro- 
letariati Kriv) and Russian {Borha Proletariata). The contents 
of the newspapers were the same in all three languages. The 
numbering of the respective newspapers was continued from 
their preceding issues. Proletariatis Brdzola was the third 
largest illegal Bolshevik newspaper (after Vperyod and 
Proletary) and consistently advocated the ideological, organi- 
sational and tactical principles of the Marxist party. The edi- 
torial board of Proletariatis Brdzola maintained close contact 
with V. I. Lenin and with the Bolshevik centre abroad. When the 



NOTES 399 



announcement of the publication of Vperyod appeared in De- 
cember 1904, the Caucasian Union Committee formed a group 
of writers to support that newspaper. In answer to an invi- 
tation of the Union Committee to contribute to Proletariatis 
Brdzola, V. I. Lenin, in a letter dated December 20 (New 
Style), 1904, wrote: "Dear Comrades. I have received your 
letter about The Proletarian Struggle. I shall try to write myself 
and pass on your request to the comrades on the editorial 
board" (see Lenin, Works, 4th Russ. ed.. Vol. 34, p. 240). 
Proletariatis Brdzola regularly reprinted in its columns articles 
and information from Lenin's Iskra, and later from Vperyod 
and Proletary. The newspaper published articles by V. I. Lenin. 
Proletary often published favourable reviews and comments 
on Proletariatis Brdzola and also reprinted articles and cor- 
respondence from it. No. 12 of Proletary noted the issue of 
No. 1 of Borba Proletariata in Russian. The comment concluded 
as follows: "We shall have to deal with the contents of this 
interesting newspaper again. We heartily welcome the expan- 
sion of the publishing activities of the Caucasian Union and 
wish it further success in reviving the Party spirit in the 
Caucasus." p. 62 



22 



23 



24 



This refers to J. V. Stalin's article "The Social-Democratic 
View of the National Question" (present volume, p. 31). 

p. 62 

This ukase of Tsar Nicholas II, dated December 12, 1904, 
was published in the newspapers together with a special gov- 
ernment communique on December 14, 1904. While promis- 
ing certain minor "reforms," the ukase proclaimed the 
inviolability of the autocratic power and breathed threats 
not only against the revolutionary workers and peasants, but 
also against the liberals who had dared to submit timid 
constitutional demands to the government. As V. I. Lenin 
expressed it, Nicholas II's ukase was "a slap in the face for 
the liberals." p. 77 

This "draft constitution" was drawn up by a group of mem- 
bers of the liberal League of Emancipation in October 



400 NOTES 



1904 and was issued in pamphlet form under the title: The 
Fundamental State Law of the Russian Empire. Draft of a Rus- 
sian Constitution, Moscow 1904. p. 78 



25 



26 



27 



J. V. Stalin's pamphlet Briefly About the Disagreements in 
the Party was written at the end of April 1905 in reply to arti- 
cles by N. Jordania: "Majority or Minority?" in the Social- 
Democrat, "What Is a Party?" in Mogzauri, and others. News 
of the appearance of this pamphlet soon reached the Bolshevik 
centre abroad. On July 18, 1905, N. K. Krupskaya wrote to 
the Caucasian Union Committee of the R.S.D.L.P. requesting 
that copies of the pamphlet be sent to the centre. The pamphlet 
was widely circulated among the Bolshevik organisations in 
Transcaucasia. From it the advanced workers learned of the 
disagreements within the Party and of the stand taken by the 
Bolsheviks headed by V. I. Lenin. The pamphlet was printed 
at the underground printing press of the Caucasian Union 
of the R.S.D.L.P. in Avlabar in May 1905, in the Georgian 
language, and in June it was printed in the Russian and Arme- 
nian languages, each in 1,500-2,000 copies. p. 90 

Iskra {The Spark) — the first all-Russian illegal Marxist news- 
paper, founded by V. I. Lenin in 1900. The first issue of Lenin's 
Iskra appeared on December 11 (24), 1900, in Leipzig, after 
which it was published in Munich, London (from April 1902), 
and, beginning with the spring of 1903, in Geneva. Groups 
and committees of the R.S.D.L.P. supporting the 'Lenm-Iskra 
line were organised in a number of towns of Russia, including 
St. Petersburg and Moscow. In Transcaucasia the ideas propa- 
gated by Iskra were upheld by the illegal newspaper Brdzola, 
the organ of Georgian revolutionary Social-Democracy. (On 
the role and significance of Iskra see the History of the 
C.P.S.UfB.), Short Course, Moscow 1952, pp. 55-68.) p. 91 

Social-Democrat — the illegal newspaper published in the Geor- 
gian language in Tiflis by the Caucasian Mensheviks from 
April to November 1905. It was edited by N. Jordania. The 
first number appeared as "the organ of the Tiflis Committee 



NOTES 401 



of the R.S.D.L.P.," but in the subsequent issues it called 
itself "the organ of the Caucasian Social-Democratic Labour 
Organisations." p. 93 



28 

29 
30 
31 

32 
33 



34 



35 



Rabocheye Delo {The Workers' Cause) — a magazine published in 
Geneva at irregular intervals from 1899 to 1902, by the Union 
of Russian Social-Democrats Abroad ("Economists"). p. 93 

See V. I. Lenin, Works, 4th Russ. ed., Vol. 4, p. 343. p. 94 

Starover — the pseudonym of A. N. Potresov. p. 95 

See Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, Selected Works, Vol. I, 
Moscow 1951, p. 44. p. 100 

Die Neue Zeit (New Times) — a magazine issued by the Ger- 
man Social-Democrats, published in Stuttgart from 1883 
to 1923. p. 101 

Mogzauri (The Traveller) — a magazine dealing with history, 
archeology, geography and ethnography, published in Tiflis 
from 1901 to November 1905. In January 1905 it became the 
weekly literary and political publication of the Georgian 
Social-Democrats, edited by F. Makharadze. It published 
articles by Bolshevik authors and also articles by Men- 
sheviks. p. 101 

The Hainfeld programme was adopted at the inaugural congress 
of the Austrian Social-Democratic Party held in Hainfeld 
in 1888. In its statement of principles the programme contained 
a number of points that correctly explained the course of social 
development and the tasks of the proletariat and of the pro- 
letarian party. Later, at the Vienna Congress held in 1901, 
the Hainfeld programme was dropped and another, based on 
revisionist views, was adopted in its place. p. 115 

See Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, Selected Works, Vol. I, 
Moscow 1951, p. 250. p. 119 



402 NOTES 



36 



37 



39 



40 



41 



42 



Zarya {The Dawn) — a Russian Social-Democratic theoretical 
journal founded by V. I. Lenin and published in Stuttgart. 
It was a contemporary of Iskra and had the same editors. 
It existed from April 1901 to August 1902. p. 123 

See V. I. Lenin, Works, 4th Russ. ed., Vol. 7, p. 177. p. 127 

Dnevnik Sotsial-Demokrata {The Social-Democrat'' s Diary) — a 
magazine published in Geneva at irregular intervals by 
G. V. Plekhanov from March 1905 to April 1912. Sixteen issues 
appeared. One more issue appeared in 1916. p. 127 

Gnchak Committee — a committee of the Armenian petty-bour- 
geois party called Gnchak which was formed in Geneva in 
1887 on the initiative of Armenian students. In Transcau- 
casia the party assumed the title of Armenian Social-Demo- 
cratic Party and conducted a splitting policy in the labour 
movement. After the revolution of 1905-07 the party degen- 
erated into a reactionary nationalist group. p. 136 

See Resolutions and Decisions of C.P.S.U.(B.) Congresses, 
Conferences and Central Committee Plenums, Part I, 6th Russ. 
ed., 1940, p. 45. p. 138 

Only the first part of J. V. Stalin's article "The Provisional 
Revolutionary Government and Social-Democracy" was pub- 
lished in No. 11 of Proletariatis Brdzola. Judging from 
the manuscript notes of the plan for Nos. 12, 13 and 
14 of Proletariatis Brdzola, drawn up by J. V. Stalin 
and preserved in the archives, it was intended to publish 
the second part of this article in No. 13 of that newspaper. 
Owing to the fact that Proletariatis Brdzola ceased publication 
with No. 12, the second part of the article was not pub- 
lished. Only the manuscript of the Russian translation of 
this part of the article was preserved in the files of the gen- 
darmerie. The Georgian text of the manuscript has not been 
found. p. 140 

The Amsterdam Congress of the Second International was 
held in August 1904. p. 144 



NOTES 403 



43 



44 



45 



46 



Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, "Address of the Cen- 
tral Committee to the Communist League" (see Karl Marx 
and Frederick Engels, Selected Works, Vol. I, Moscow 1951, 
p. 102). p. 145 

This refers to V. I. Lenin's work "On a Provisional Revolu- 
tionary Government" in which he quotes from F. Engels's 
article "The Bakuninists at Work" (see V. I. Lenin, Works, 
4th Russ. ed.. Vol. 8, pp. 443, 444 and 446). p. 149 

This refers to a bill to set up a State Duma with only advi- 
sory powers and to regulations governing the elections to 
the Duma drawn up by a commission under the chairmanship 
of the Minister of the Interior, Bulygin. The bill and the regu- 
lations were published together with the tsar's manifesto on 
August 6 (19), 1905. The Bolsheviks proclaimed an active 
boycott of the Bulygin Duma. That Duma was swept away by 
the force of the revolution before it could assemble. p. 159 

J. V. Stalin's article "A Reply to Social-Democrat," published 
in No. 11 of Proletariatis Brdzola, met with a lively response 
in the Bolshevik centre abroad. Briefly summing up the gist 
of the article, V. I. Lenin wrote in Proletary: "We note in 
the article 'A Reply to Social-Democrat' an excellent presen- 
tation of the celebrated question of the 'introduction of 
consciousness from without.' The author divides this ques- 
tion into four independent parts: 

"1) The philosophical question of the relation between 
consciousness and being. Being determines consciousness. 
Corresponding to the existence of two classes, two forms of 
consciousness are worked out, the bourgeois and the socialist. 
Socialist consciousness corresponds to the position of the 
proletariat. 

"2) 'Who can, and who does, work out this socialist 
consciousness (scientific socialism)?' 

"'Modern socialist consciousness can arise only on the 
basis of profound scientific knowledge' (Kautsky), i.e., 'it 
is worked out by a few Social-Democratic intellectuals who 
possess the necessary means and leisure.' 



404 NOTES 



"3) How does this consciousness permeate the minds 
of the proletariat? 'It is here that Social-Democracy (and not 
only Social-Democratic intellectuals) comes in and intro- 
duces socialist consciousness into the working-class move- 
ment.' 

"4) What does Social-Democracy meet with among the 
proletariat when it goes among them to preach socialism? 
An instinctive striving towards socialism. 'Together with the 
proletariat there arises of natural necessity a socialist tend- 
ency among the proletarians themselves as well as among those 
who adopt the proletarian standpoint. This explains the rise 
of socialist strivings.' (Kautsky.) 

"From this the Mensheviks draw the following ridiculous 
conclusion: 'Hence it is obvious that socialism is not intro- 
duced among the proletariat from without, but, on the con- 
trary, emanates from the proletariat and enters the heads of 
those who adopt the views of the proletariat'!" (See V. I. Lenin, 
Works, 4th Russ. ed., Vol. 9, p. 357.) p. 162 



47 



48 
49 



50 



"A Reply to the Union Committee" was published as a 
supplement to No. 3 of the Social-Democrat of June 1, 1905. 
It was written by N. Jordania, the leader of the Georgian 
Mensheviks, whose views had been subjected to scathing crit- 
icism by J. V. Stalin in his pamphlet Briefly About the Dis- 
agreements in the Party and in other works. p. 162 

See V. I. Lenin, Works, 4th Russ. ed.. Vol. 6, p. 219. p. 171 

Moskovskiye Vedomosti {Moscow Gazette) — a newspaper, began 
publication in 1756 and expressed the interests of the most 
reactionary circles of the feudal nobility and clergy. In 
1905 it became the organ of the Black Hundreds. It was 
closed down after the October Revolution in 1917. p. 7 75 

Russkiye Vedomosti {Russian Gazette) — a newspaper founded 
in Moscow in 1863 by the liberal professors at the Moscow 
University and by leading Zemstvo people. It expressed 



NOTES 405 



the interests of the liberal landlords and bourgeoisie. In 1905 
became the organ of the Right-wing Cadets. p. 177 



51 



52 



53 



54 



Proletary (The Proletarian) — an illegal Bolshevik weekly news- 
paper, the Central Organ of the Russian Social-Democratic 
Labour Party, founded by the decision of the Third Congress 
of the Party. It was published in Geneva from May 14 (27) to 
November 12 (25), 1905. In all, twenty-six numbers were pub- 
lished. V. I. Lenin was chief editor. Proletary continued the 
policy of the old, Leninist Iskra, and was the successor to 
the Bolshevik newspaper Vperyod. It ceased publication on 
V. I. Lenin's return to St. Petersburg. p. 178 

The Constitutional-Democratic Party (Cadet Party) — the prin- 
cipal party of the liberal-monarchist bourgeoisie. Was formed 
in October 1905. Under the cloak of a spurious democratism 
and calling themselves the party of "Popular Freedom," the 
Cadets tried to win the peasantry to their side. They strove 
to preserve tsarism in the form of a constitutional monarchy. 
Subsequently, the Cadets became the party of the imperialist 
bourgeoisie. After the victory of the October Socialist Revo- 
lution the Cadets organised counter-revolutionary conspiracies 
and revolts against the Soviet Republic. p. 181 

Kavkazsky Rabochy Listok (Caucasian Workers' Newssheet) — 
the first legal daily Bolshevik newspaper in the Caucasus, 
published in Tiflis in Russian from November 20 to December 
14, 1905. It was directed by J. V. Stalin and S. G. Shaumyan. 
At the Fourth Conference of the Caucasian Union of the 
R.S.D.L.P it was recognised as the official organ of the Cau- 
casian Union. In all, seventeen numbers were published. The 
last two numbers appeared under the title of Yelizavetpolsky 
Vestnik (Yelizavetpol Herald). p. 797 

In December 1905, the Latvian towns of Tukums, Talsen, 
Rujen, Friedrichstadt, and others, were captured by armed 
detachments of insurgent workers, agricultural labourers and 



406 NOTES 



peasants, and guerilla warfare began against the tsarist troops. 
In January 1906 the uprising in Latvia was crushed by 
punitive expeditions under the command of generals Orlov, 
Sologub, and others, p. 204 



55 



56 



57 



J. V. Stalin's article "The State Duma and the Tactics of 
Social-Democracy" was published on March 8, 1906, in the 
newspaper Gantiadi {The Dawn), the daily organ of the united 
Tiflis Committee of the R.S.D.L.P., which came out from 
March 5 to 10, 1906. The article was an official expression of 
the Bolsheviks' stand on the question of the tactics to be adopt- 
ed towards the Duma. The preceding number of Gantiadi 
had contained an article entitled "The State Duma Elections 
and Our Tactics," signed H., which expressed the Menshevik 
stand on this question. J. V. Stalin's article was accompanied 
by the following editorial comment: "In yesterday's issue 
we published an article expressing the views of one section 
of our comrades on the question of whether to go into the State 
Duma or not. Today, as we promised, we are publishing another 
article expressing the principles adhered to on this question 
by another section of our comrades. As the readers will see, 
there is a fundamental difference between these two articles: 
the author of the first article is in favour of taking part in 
the Duma elections; the author of the second article is opposed 
to this. Neither of the two authors is expressing merely his 
own point of view. Both express the line of tactics of the two 
trends that exist in the Party. This is the case not only here, 
but all over Russia." p. 208 

Revolutsionnaya Rossiya {Revolutionary Russia) — the organ 
of the Socialist-Revolutionaries, published from the end of 
1900 to 1905. At first it was published by the League of 
Socialist-Revolutionaries, but in January 1902 it became the 
central organ of the Socialist-Revolutionary Party. p. 226 

Novaya Zhizn {New Life) — the first legal Bolshevik newspaper, 
published in St. Petersburg from October 27 to Decemljer 3, 
1905. When V. I. Lenin arrived from abroad, Novaya Zhizn 



NOTES 407 



began to appear under his personal direction. An active part 
in the publication of the newspaper was taken by Maxim 
Gorky. On the appearance of No. 27 of Novaya Zhizn the paper 
was suppressed by the authorities. No. 28, the last number to 
be published, came out illegally. p. 229 

Nachalo {The Beginning) — a legal daily newspaper published 
in St. Petersburg by the Mensheviks from November 13 to 
December 2, 1905. p. 229 



59 



60 



61 



Tsnobis Purtseli {News Bulletin) — a daily Georgian news- 
paper published in Tiflis from 1896 to 1906. At the end of 
1900 it became the mouthpiece of the Georgian nationalists, 
and in 1904 became the organ of the Georgian Social-Feder- 
alists, p. 231 

Elva {The Lightning) — a daily Georgian newspaper, organ 
of the united Tiflis Committee of the R.S.D.L.P., began publi- 
cation after the suppression of Gantiadi. The first number was 
issued on March 12 and the last on April 15, 1906. On behalf 
of the Bolsheviks the leading articles were written by 
J. V. Stalin. In all, twenty-seven numbers were issued. p. 232 

The Fourth ("Unity") Congress of the R.S.D.L.P. was held 
in Stockholm from April 10 to 25 (April 23 to May 8, New 
Style), 1906. Representatives were also present from the na- 
tional Social-Democratic parties of Poland and Lithuania, 
Latvia and from the Bund. Many of the Bolshevik organisations 
were broken up by the government after the armed uprising in 
December 1905 and were therefore unable to send delegates. 
The Mensheviks had a majority at this congress, although a 
small one. The predominance of the Mensheviks at the congress 
determined the character of its decisions on a number of ques- 
tions. J. V. Stalin attended the congress as a delegate from 
the Tiflis organisation of the Bolsheviks under the pseudonym 
of Ivanovich. He took part in the debates on the draft agrarian 
programme, on the current situation, and on the State Duma. 
In addition, he made several statements of fact, in which he 



408 



62 
63 

64 

65 



66 



67 



68 



exposed the opportunist tactics of the Transcaucasian Menshe- 
viks on the question of the State Duma, on the agreement 
with the Bund, and other questions. p. 238 

John — the pseudonym of P. P. Maslov. p. 238 

N. H. — Noah Homeriki, a Menshevik. p. 243 

Simartleh {Truth) — a daily political and literary newspaper pub- 
lished by the Georgian Mensheviks in Tiflis in 1906. p. 243 

K. Kautsky and J. Guesde at that time had not yet gone over 
to the camp of the opportunists. The Russian revolution of 
1905-07, which greatly influenced the international revolu- 
tionary movement and the working class of Germany in partic- 
ular, caused K. Kautsky to take the stand of revolutionary 
Social-Democracy on a number of questions. p. 243 

Akhali Tskhovreba {New Life) — a daily Bolshevik newspaper 
published in Tiflis from June 20 to July 14, 1906, under the 
direction of J. V. Stalin. M. Davitashvili, G. Telia, G. Kikodze 
and others were permanent members of the staff. In all, twenty 
numbers were issued. p. 244 

This passage is quoted from an article by V. I. Lenin entitled 
"The Present Situation in Russia and the Tactics of the Work- 
ers' Party" (see Works, 4th Russ. ed.. Vol. 10, pp. 98-99), pub- 
lished in Partiiniye Izvestia {Party News), the organ of the 
united Central Committee of the R.S.D.L.P. Partiiniye 
Izvestia was published illegally in St. Petersburg just 
prior to the Fourth ("Unity") Congress of the Party. Two 
numbers were issued: No. 1 on February 7 and No. 2 on 
March 20, 1906. p. 245 

Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, Revolution and Counter-revo- 
lution in Germany (see Karl Marx, Selected Works, Vol. II, 
Moscow 1936, p. 135). ^.246 



69 



70 



71 



72 



73 



74 



409 



See Frederick Engels, Die Bakunisten an der Arbeit, Moskau 
1941, S. 16-17. p. 247 

Severnaya Zemlya {Northern Land) — a legal Bolshevik daily 
newspaper published in St. Petersburg from June 23 to 28, 
1906. p. 249 

Rossiya (Russia) — a daily newspaper expressing the views 
of the police and the Black Hundreds, published from No- 
vember 1905 to April 1914. Organ of the Ministry of the 
Interior. p. 249 

In June and July 1906, P. A. Stolypin, the Minister of the 
Interior, issued an order to the local authorities demanding 
the ruthless suppression by armed force of the revolutionary 
movement of the workers and peasants and the revolutionary 
organisations. p. 250 

D. Trepov — the Governor-General of St. Petersburg, who 
directed the suppression of the 1905 Revolution. p. 250 

J. V. Stalin's work The Present Situation and the Unity Con- 
gress of the Workers' Party was published in the Georgian 
language in Tiflis in 1906 by Proletariat Publishers. An appen- 
dix to the pamphlet contained the three draft resolutions 
submitted by the Bolsheviks to the Fourth ("Unity") Congress: 

1) "The Present Situation in the Democratic Revolution" 
(see V. I. Lenin, Works, 4th Russ. ed.. Vol. 10, pp. 130-31), 

2) "The Class Tasks of the Proletariat in the Present Situation 
in the Democratic Revolution" (see Resolutions and Decisions 
of C.P.S.U.(B.) Congresses, Conferences and Central Committee 
Plenums, Part I, 6th Russ. ed., 1940, p. 65), 3) "Armed Insurrec- 
tion" (see V. I. Lenin, Works, 4th Russ. ed.. Vol. 10, pp. 131-33), 
and also the draft resolution on the State Duma submitted 
to the congress on behalf of the Bolsheviks by V. I. Lenin (see 
V. I. Lenin, Works, 4th Russ. ed.. Vol. 10, pp. 266-67). The 
appendix also contained the resolution adopted by the con- 
gress on armed insurrection, and also the draft resolution of 



410 NOTES 



the Mensheviks on "The Present Situation in the Revolution 
and the Tasks of the Proletariat." p. 252 



75 



76 



77 



78 



79 



80 



The Party of Democratic Reform — a party of the liberal- 
monarchist bourgeoisie, was formed during the election of 
the First State Duma in 1906. p. 263 

The Octobrists, or Union of October Seventeenth — the coun- 
ter-revolutionary party of the big commercial and industrial 
bourgeoisie and big landowners, was formed in November 
1905. It fully supported the Stolypin regime, the home 
and foreign policy of tsarism. p. 263 

Trudoviks, or Group of Toil — a group of petty-bourgeois 
democrats formed in April 1906, consisting of the peasant 
deputies in the First State Duma. They demanded the aboli- 
tion of all caste and national restrictions, the democratisation 
of the rural and municipal local government bodies, universal 
suffrage for the election of the State Duma and, above all, 
the solution of the agrarian problem. p. 266 

Nasha Zhizn {Our Life) — a liberal-bourgeois newspaper pub- 
lished in St. Petersburg with interruptions from November 
1904 to December 1906. p. 269 

Akhali Droyeba {New Times) — a trade union weekly 
newspaper published legally in the Georgian language in 
Tiflis from November 14, 1906, to January 8, 1907, under 
the directorship of J. V. Stalin, M. Tskhakaya, and M. 
Davitashvili. Was suppressed by order of the Governor of 
Tiflis. p. 288 

The commission headed by Senator Shidlovsky was set up 
by the tsar's ukase of January 29, 1905, ostensibly "for the 
purpose of urgently investigating the causes of discontent 
among the workers of the city of St. Petersburg and its suburbs." 
It was intended to include in the commission delegates elected 
by the workers. The Bolsheviks regarded this as an attempt 
on the part of the tsarist government to divert the workers 



NOTES 411 



from the revolutionary struggle and therefore proposed that ad- 
vantage be taken of the election of delegates to this commission 
to present political demands to the government. After the 
government rejected these demands the worker-electors 
refused to elect their representatives to the commission and 
called upon the workers of St. Petersburg to come out on strike. 
Mass political strikes broke out the very next day. On February 
20, 1905, the tsarist government was obliged to dissolve the 
Shidlovsky Commission. p. 290 



n 



The function of the commission headed by V. N. Kokovtsev, 
the Minister of Finance, set up in February 1905, was, like 
that of the Shidlovsky Commission, to investigate the labour 
problem, but without the participation of workers' represent- 
atives. The commission remained in existence until the sum- 
mer of 1905. p. 290 

82 

The Associations Act of March 4, 1906, granted right of legal 
existence to societies and unions, provided they registered 
their rules with the government. Notwithstanding the numerous 
restrictions imposed upon the activities of various associations 
and the fact that they were held criminally liable for infringe- 
ments of the law, the workers made extensive use of the 
rights granted them in order to form proletarian industrial 
organisations. In the period of 1905-07 mass trade unions were 
formed in Russia for the first time, and these waged an eco- 
nomic and political struggle under the leadership of revolu- 
tionary Social-Democracy. p. 290 

83 

After the promulgation of the tsar's Manifesto of October 17, 
1905, S. J. Witte, the President of the Council of Ministers, 
and P. N. Durnovo, the Minister of the Interior, notwithstand- 
ing the official proclamation of "freedom," issued a series of 
circulars and telegrams to provincial governors and city 
governors, calling upon them to disperse meetings and assem- 
blies by armed force, to suppress newspapers, to take stringent 
measures against trade unions, and summarily exile all persons 
suspected of conducting revolutionary activities, etc. p. 290 



412 NOTES 



84 



At the end of 1905 and the beginning of 1906, a group of 
Anarchists in Georgia, headed by the well-known Anarchist and 
follower of Kropotkin, V. Cherkezishvili and his supporters 
Mikhako Tsereteli (Baton), Shalva Gogelia (Sh. G.) and others 
conducted a fierce campaign against the Social-Democrats. 
This group published in Tiflis the newspapers Nobati, Musha 
and others. The Anarchists had no support among the prole- 
tariat, but they achieved some success among the declassed 
and petty-bourgeois elements. J. V. Stalin wrote a series of 
articles against the Anarchists under the general title of 
Anarchism or Socialism? The first four instalments appeared 
in Akhali Tskhovreba in June and July 1906. The rest were not 
published as the newspaper was suppressed by the authorities. 
In December 1906 and on January 1, 1907, the articles that 
were published in Akhali Tskhovreba were reprinted in Akhali 
Droyeba, in a slightly revised form, with the following edi- 
torial comment: "Recently, the Office Employees' Union wrote 
to us suggesting that we should publish articles on anarchism, 
socialism, and cognate questions (see Akhali Droyeba, No. 3). 
The same wish was expressed by several other comrades. 
We gladly meet these wishes and publish these articles. 
Regarding them, we think it necessary to mention that 
some have already appeared in the Georgian press (but for 
reasons over which the author had no control, they were not 
completed). Nevertheless we considered it necessary to reprint 
all the articles in full and requested the author to rewrite them 
in a more popular style, and this he gladly did." This explains 
the two versions of the first four instalments of Anarchism or 
Socialism? They were continued in the newspapers Chveni 
Tskhovreba in February 1907, and in Dro in April 1907. The 
first version of the articles Anarchism or Socialism? as pub- 
lished in Akhali Tskhovreba is given as an appendix to the present 
volume. 

Chveni Tskhovreba {Our Life) — a daily Bolshevik news- 
paper published legally in Tiflis under the direction of 
J. V. Stalin, began publication on February 18, 1907. In all, 
thirteen numbers were issued. It was suppressed on March 6, 
1907, for its "extremist trend." 



NOTES 413 



Dro {Time) — a daily Bolshevik newspaper published in 
Tiflis after the suppression of Chveni Tskhovreba, ran from 
March 11 to April 15, 1907, under the direction of J. V. Stalin. 
M. Tskhakaya and M. Davitashvili were members of the edi- 
torial board. In all, thirty-one numbers were issued. p. 297 



85 



Nobati {The Call) — a weekly newspaper published by the G 
gian Anarchists in Tiflis in 1906. p. . 



87 



eor- 
p. 305 



89 



90 



91 



92 



93 



Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, Selected Works, Vol. II, 
Moscow 1951, p; 328. p. 307 

Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, Selected Works, Vol. I, 
Moscow 1951, p; 329. 9. 311 

See Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, Die heilige Familie, "Kri- 
tische Schlacht gegen den franzosischen Materialismus." 
(Marx-Engels, Gesamtausgabe, Erste Abteilung, Band 3, 
S. 307-08.) p. 323 

See Karl Marx, Misere de la Philosophie. (Marx-Engels, Gesamt- 
ausgabe, Erste Abteilung, Band 6, S. 227.) p. 337 

See Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, Selected Works, Vol. II, 
Moscow 1951, p. 292. p. 337 

See Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, Selected Works, Vol. II, 
Moscow 1951, p. 23. p. 339 

See Frederick Engels, Herr Eugen Diihring's Revolution in 
Science {Anti-DUhring), Moscow 1947, pp. 233-35. p. 343 

Musha {The Worker) — a daily newspaper published by the 
Georgian Anarchists in Tiflis in 1906. p. 352 



414 NOTES 



94 



95 



96 



97 



Khma {The Voice) — a daily newspaper published by the Geor- 
gian Anarchists in Tiflis in 1906. p. 352 

Karl Marx, The Cologne Trial of the Communists, published 
by Molot Publishers, St. Petersburg, 1906, p. 113 (IX. Ap- 
pendix. Address of the Central Committee to the Communist 
League, March, 1850). (See Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, 
Selected Works, Vol. I, Moscow 1951, pp. 104-05.) p. 364 

See Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, Selected Works, Vol. II, 
Moscow 1951, p. 420. p. 365 

The author quotes this passage from Karl Marx's pamphlet 
The Civil War in France, with a preface by F. Engels, Russian 
translation from the German edited by N. Lenin, 1905 (see 
Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, Selected Works, Vol. I, 
Moscow 1951, p. 440). ^.368 



BIOGRAPHICAL CHRONICLE 

{1879-19 06) 



18 79 

December 9 Joseph Vissarionovich Djugashvili (Stalin) 

was born in Gori, Georgia. 



1888 

September J. V. Stalin enters the elementary clerical 

school in Gori. 



189 4 

June J. V. Stalin graduates from the Gori school 

with highest marks. 

September 2 J. V. Stalin enters first grade of the Tiflis 

Theological Seminary. 

189 5 

J. V. Stalin establishes contact with the 



416 



BIOGRAPHICAL CHRONICLE 



1896-1898 

In the Theological Seminary in Tiflis 
J. V. Stalin conducts Marxist circles of stu- 
dents, studies Capital, the Manifesto of the 
Communist Party, and other works of K. Marx 
and F. Engels, and becomes acquainted with 
the early works of V. I. Lenin. 

1898 



January 



August 



J. V. Stalin begins to conduct a workers' 
Marxist circle in the Central Railway Work 
shops in Tiflis. 

J. V. Stalin joins the Georgian Social- 
Democratic organisation Messameh Dassy. 
J. V. Stalin, V. Z. Ketskhoveli and A. G. Tsu- 
lukidze form the core of the revolutionary 
Marxist minority in the Messameh Dassy. 



J. V. Stalin draws up a programme of studies 
for Marxist workers' circles. 



J. V. Stalin, V. Z. Ketskhoveli and A. G. Tsu- 
lukidze raise the question of founding an il- 
legal revolutionary Marxist press. This gives 
rise to the first sharp disagreements between 
the revolutionary minority and the opportu- 
nist majority in the Messameh Dassy. 

1899 



May 29 



J. V. Stalin is expelled from the Tiflis Theolog- 
ical Seminary for propagating Marxism. 



BIOGRAPHICAL CHRONICLE 



417 



December 28 J. V. Stalin starts work at the Tiflis Physical 
Observatory. 



190 



April 23 



J. V. Stalin addresses a workers' May Day meet- 
ing in the region of Salt Lake, on the outskirts 
of Tiflis. 



Summer 



J. V. Stalin establishes contact with V. K. Kur- 
natovsky, a well-known supporter of Lenin's 
Iskra, who had arrived in Tiflis for Party 
work. 



August 



J. V. Stalin leads a mass strike at the Central 
Railway Workshops in Tiflis. 



189 8-19 00 

Under the leadership of J. V. Stalin, V. Z. 
Ketskhoveli and A. G. Tsulukidze, a central 
leading group is formed within the Tiflis 
organisation of the R.S.D.L.P., which passes 
from propaganda in study circles to mass 
political agitation. The group organises the 
printing of manifestoes and their distribution 
among the workers, forms underground Social- 
Democratic circles, and leads the strikes and 
political struggle of the Tiflis proletariat. 



190 1 



March 21 J. V. Stalin's lodgings at the Tiflis Physical 

Observatory are searched by the police. 



418 



BIOGRAPHICAL CHRONICLE 



March 28 J. V. Stalin leaves the Tiflis Physical Observ- 

atory and goes underground. 

April 22 J. V. Stalin leads the workers' May Day dem- 

onstration in the Soldatsky Market Place, in 
the centre of Tiflis. 

September No. 1 of the illegal newspaper Brdzola, the 

organ of the revolutionary wing of the Geor- 
gian Marxists published on the initiative of 
J. V. Stalin, appears in Baku. The article 
"From the Editors," outlining the programme 
of the newspaper which appeared in that issue, 
was written by J. V. Stalin. 

November 11 J. V. Stalin is elected a member of the first 

Tiflis Committee of the R.S.D.L.P., which fol- 
lowed the Leninist-Z^-Arra trend. 

End of November The Tiflis Committee sends J. V. Stalin to 
Batum to form a Social-Democratic organisa- 
tion there. 



December No. 2-3 of Brdzola appears, containing 

J. V. Stalin's article "The Russian Social- 
Democratic Party and Its Immediate Tasks." 

J. V. Stalin establishes contact with the ad- 
vanced workers in Batum and organises Social- 
Democratic circles at the Rothschild, Manta- 
shev, Sideridis, and other plants. 

December 31 J. V. Stalin organises in the guise of a New 

Year's party a secret conference of represent- 
atives of Social-Democratic study circles. The 
conference elects a leading group, headed by 
J. V. Stalin, which acted virtually as the 
Batum Committee of the R.S.D.L.P. of the 
Leninist-Iskra trend. 



BIOGRAPHICAL CHRONICLE 



419 



19 02 



January 



J. V. Stalin organises in Batum an under- 
ground printing plant, writes leaflets and 
organises the printing and distribution of 
manifestoes. 



January 31 - J. V. Stalin organises a strike at the Man- 

February 17 tashev plant which ends in the victory of 

the workers. 

February 27 - J. V. Stalin directs the activities of the strike 
beginning of committee during a strike at the Rothschild 

March plant. 

March 8 J. V. Stalin leads a demonstration of strikers 

who demand the release of 32 of their arrested 
fellow-strikers. 



March 9 



J. V. Stalin organises and leads a political 
demonstration of over 6,000 workers em- 
ployed in the various plants in Batum who 
demand the release of 300 worker-demonstra- 
tors arrested by the police on March 8. 
Outside the prison where the arrested workers 
were confined, the demonstration was shot at 
by troops and 15 workers were killed and 54 
were injured. About 500 demonstrators were 
arrested. That same night J. V. Stalin wrote 
a manifesto on the shooting down of the 
demonstrators. 



March 12 J. V. Stalin leads a workers' demonstration 

which he had organised in connection with 
the funeral of the victims of the shooting on 
March 9 



April 5 



J. V. Stalin is arrested at a meeting of the 
leading Party group in Batum. 



420 



BIOGRAPHICAL CHRONICLE 



April 6 

April 1902 - 
April 19, 1903 



J. V. Stalin is detained in the Batum jail. 

While in the Batum jail, J. V. Stalin establishes 
and maintains contact with the Batum Social- 
Democratic organisation, directs its activities, 
writes leaflets, and conducts political work 
among the prisoners. 



March 



April 19 



Autumn 



November 27 



December 



1903 

The Caucasian Union of the R.S.D.L.P. is 
formed at the First Congress of Caucasian Social- 
Democratic Labour Organisations. J. V. Stalin, 
then confined in the Batum jail, is in his absence 
elected a member of the Caucasian Union Com- 
mittee that was set up at the congress. 

J. V. Stalin is transferred from the Batum 
jail to the Kutais jail, where he establishes 
contact with the other political prisoners and 
conducts among them propaganda on behalf of 
the Leninist-Is kr a ideas. 

J. V. Stalin is retransferred to the Batum 
jail, whence he is deported under escort to 
Eastern Siberia. 

J. V. Stalin arrives at the village of Novaya 
Uda, Balagansk Uyezd, Irkutsk Gubernia, 
his place of exile. 

While in Siberia, J. V. Stalin receives a letter 
from V. I. Lenin. 



January 5 



19 04 

J. V. Stalin escapes from his place of exile. 



BIOGRAPHICAL CHRONICLE 421 



February J. V. Stalin arrives in Tiflis and directs tlie 

work of tlie Caucasian Union Committee of 
theR.S.D.L.P. 

J. V. Stalin drafts the programmatic document 
entitled Credo dealing with the disagree- 
ments within the Party and with the organi- 
sational tasks of the Party. 

June J. V. Stalin arrives in Baku where, on the 

instructions of the Caucasian Union Commit- 
tee, he dissolves the Menshevik committee 
and forms a new, Bolshevik committee. 

Summer J. V. Stalin makes a tour of the most impor- 

tant districts of Transcaucasia and debates 
with Mensheviks, Federalists, Anarchists and 
others. 

In Kutais, J. V. Stalin forms a Bolshevik 
Imeretia-Mingrelia Committee. 

September 1 Proletarians Brdzola, No. 7, publishes 

J. V. Stalin's article "The Social-Democratic 
View of the National Question." 

September - In connection with the disagreements within 

October the Party, J. V. Stalin, while in Kutais, 

writes letters to the Georgian Bolsheviks abroad, 
expounding Lenin's views on the combination 
of socialism with the working-class move- 
ment. 

November J. V. Stalin arrives in Baku and leads the 

campaign for the convocation of the Third 
Congress of the Party. 

December 13-31 J. V. Stalin leads the general strike of the 
Baku workers. 



422 BIOGRAPHICAL CHRONICLE 



1905 

January 1 Proletarians Brdzola, No. 8, publishes 

J. V. Stalin's article "The Proletarian Class 
and the Proletarian Party." 

January 8 The manifesto is issued entitled "Workers 

of the Caucasus, It Is Time to Take Revenge!" 
written by J. V. Stalin in connection with the 
defeat tsarism had sustained in the Far East. 

Beginning of On the initiative of J. V. Stalin, the Caucasian 

February Union Committee dissolves the Menshevik 

Tiflis Committee, which had announced its 
withdrawal from the Caucasian Union of the 
R.S.D.L.P., and forms a new, Bolshevik Tiflis 
Committee. 

February 13 In connection with the Tatar-Armenian mas- 

sacre in Baku which had been provoked by 
the police, J. V. Stalin writes the leaflet enti- 
tled "Long Live International Fraternity!" 

February 15 In connection with the successful demonstra- 

tion of many thousands of people held in Tiflis 
to protest against an attempt by the police to 
provoke massacres among the different nation- 
alities in that city too, J. V. Stalin writes 
the leaflet entitled "To Citizens. Long Live 
the Red Flag!" 

April J. V. Stalin speaks at a big meeting in Batum 

in a debate with the Menshevik leaders N. Ra- 
mishvili, R. Arsenidze, and others. 

May J. V. Stalin's pamphlet Briefly About the 

Disagreements in the Party is published. 



BIOGRAPHICAL CHRONICLE 



423 



June 12 



July 15 



J. V. Stalin delivers a speech at the funeral of 
A. G. Tsulukidze in which he outlines a pro- 
gramme of struggle to be waged by the workers 
and peasants against the autocracy, and sub- 
jects the tactics of the Mensheviks to devas- 
tating criticism. 

Proletarians Brdzola, No. 10, publishes 
J. V. Stalin's article "Armed Insurrection and 
Our Tactics." 



July 18 



July 



In a letter to the Caucasian Union Committee, 
N. K. Krupskaya asks for copies of 
J. V. Stalin's pamphlet Briefly About the 
Disagreements in the Party and also for the 
regular delivery oi Borba Proletariata. 

J. V. Stalin speaks before an audience of 2,000 
in Chiaturi in debate with the Anarchists, 
Federalists and Socialist-Revolutionaries. 



August 15 Proletarians Brdzola, No. 11, publishes 

J. V. Stalin's articles "The Provisional Revo- 
lutionary Government and Social-Democracy" 
and "A Reply to Social-Democrat.^' 

October 15 Proletariatis Brdzola, No. 12, publishes 

J. V. Stalin's articles "Reaction Is Growing" 
and "The Bourgeoisie Is Laying a Trap." 

October 18 J. V. Stalin addresses a workers' meeting in 

the Nadzaladevi district of Tiflis on the tsar's 
Manifesto of October 17. 



October 



In connection with the October all-Russian 
political strike, J. V. Stalin writes the leaflets 
"Citizens!" and "To All the Workers!" 



424 



BIOGRAPHICAL CHRONICLE 



November 20 No. 1 of Kavkazsky Rabochy Listok appears 
with a leading article by J. V. Stalin entitled 
"Tiflis, November 20, 1905." 

End of November J. V. Stalin directs the proceedings of the 
Fourth Bolshevik Conference of the Cauca- 
sian Union of the R.S.D.L.P. 

December 12-17 J. V. Stalin takes part in the proceedings of 
the First All-Russian Conference of Bolshe- 
viks in Tammerfors as a delegate of the Cau- 
casian Union of the R.S.D.L.P. At this con- 
ference he became personally acquainted with 
V. I. Lenin. 



19 6 

Beginning of J. V. Stalin's pamphlet Two Clashes is pub- 

January lished. 



March 8 



J. V. Stalin's article "The State Duma and 
the Tactics of Social-Democracy" appears in 
Gantiadi, No. 3. 



March 17-29 J. V. Stalin's articles "The Agrarian Question" 

and "Concerning the Agrarian Question," ap- 
pear in Nos. 5, 9, 10 and 14 of the newspaper 
Elva. 



End of March J. V. Stalin is elected a delegate from the 

Tiflis organisation to the Fourth ("Unity") 
Congress of the R.S.D.L.P. 

April 10-25 J. V. Stalin takes part in the proceedings of the 

Fourth ("Unity") Congress of the R.S.D.L.P. 
in Stockholm at which, in opposition to 



425 



BIOGRAPHICAL CHRONICLE 



the Mensheviks, he substantiates and defends 
the Bolshevik tactics in the revolution. 



June 20 



No. 1 of Akhali Tskhovreba, directed by 
J. V. Stalin, appears. 



June 21-July 9 



J. V. Stalin's series of articles Anarchism 
or Socialism? appear in Nos. 2, 4, 7 and 16 
of the Bolshevik newspaper Akhali Tskhovreba. 



June-November 



J. V. Stalin directs the work of organising the 
first trade unions in Tiflis (printers, shop 
assistants, and others). 



July 13 



J. V. Stalin's article "Marx and Engels on 
Insurrection" appears in Akhali Tskhovreba, 
No. 19. 



July 14 



J. V. Stalin's article "International Counter- 
revolution" appears in Akhali Tskhovreba, 
No. 20. 



July-August J. V. Stalin's pamphlet The Present Situation 

and the Unity Congress of the Workers' Party 
is published. 

September J. V. Stalin takes part in the proceedings of 

the Regional Congress of Caucasian Organi- 
sations of the R.S.D.L.P. 



November 14 No. 1 of Akhali Droyeba, directed by 
J. V. Stalin, appears, containing his article 
"The Class Struggle." 



426 BIOGRAPHICAL CHRONICLE 



December 4 Akhali Droyeba, No. 4, publishes J. V. Stalin's 

article "'Factory Legislation' and the Prole- 
tarian Struggle." 

December 11 Akhali Droyeba, No. 5, resumes publication 

of J. V. Stalin's series of articles Anarchism 
or Socialism? 

December 18,1906 - Publication of J. V. Stalin's series of articles 
April 10, 1907 Anarchism or Socialism? is continued in 

the Bolshevik newspapers Akhali Droyeba, 

Chveni Tskhovreba and Dro. 



Printed in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics 



'I